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Body Rose Gold is a Chypre Fruity women's fragrance from Burberry, launched in 2012. The composition opens with freesia, peach, wormwood. The heart features iris, sandalwood, rose. The base resolves into musk, amber, vanilla, cashmir wood.
Heart of the fragrance (2-4 hrs)
Dry down (4+ hrs)
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A Cashmere Sweater in a Bottle — Body Rose Gold by Burberry
Burberry Body Rose Gold, released as a limited edition in 2012, is a quiet masterclass in cozy sophistication. Where the original Burberry Body leaned angular and dry, the Rose Gold flanker wraps itself in cashmere wood, sandalwood, and creamy vanilla to create something that genuinely earns the comparison to slipping on a favorite sweater. Community reception has been warmly positive, with most criticism directed not at the fragrance itself but at its limited availability and frustratingly inconsistent longevity.
This is a fragrance for those who value comfort and intimacy over drama. It does not project across rooms or demand attention. Instead, it creates a warm, personal aura that rewards closeness. The beautiful collector bottle is a bonus, though paying collector prices for what amounts to a skin scent is a gamble not everyone should take.
The opening introduces freesia and peach with a gentle, slightly fruity softness, accompanied by a curious herbal edge from wormwood that keeps the top notes from tipping into saccharine territory. It is an understated beginning that hints at the warmth to come rather than shouting about it.
The heart is where the fragrance finds its identity. Rose appears, but not as a dominant floral -- it is subtle, sweet, and thoroughly integrated into the surrounding woods. Iris adds a powdery, suede-like quality, while sandalwood begins its slow, creamy ascent. The overall impression is of soft pink petals dusted onto warm wood, feminine without being girlish.
The base is the star. Cashmere wood and sandalwood dominate, creating a smooth, enveloping warmth that sits close to the skin. Musk adds a clean, skin-like finish, while vanilla and amber provide just enough sweetness to keep things inviting. One reviewer described the drydown as a warm hug on a wintery day, and that captures it perfectly. Another compared it to an early cool autumn morning with a cozy sweater -- and both descriptions speak to the same essential quality of textured, intimate warmth.
Fall and winter are where Body Rose Gold belongs. The soft woody-musky character needs cool air to breathe properly, and the warmth it generates feels purposeful rather than suffocating when temperatures drop. Early fall mornings, office days with layered outfits, coffee dates, and quiet evenings at home are its ideal settings.
This is not a summer fragrance, and it is not designed for occasions that demand presence and projection. It works best when you are close to people you care about and want to smell approachable, polished, and comforting.
Performance is the most polarizing aspect of Body Rose Gold. Reports range from barely one hour to over five, with most wearers landing somewhere in the three-to-four-hour range. Projection is modest throughout -- this is fundamentally a skin scent that stays within arm's reach.
The inconsistency appears to be tied to skin chemistry more than batch variation, though with a limited edition from 2012, bottle age may also play a role. If you tend to eat through fragrances quickly, prepare for disappointment. Those with skin that holds musky compositions may get a full workday from a generous application.
Fans of Body Rose Gold speak about it with genuine affection, often placing it above the original Body and the Intense flanker in their personal rankings. The cashmere wood and sandalwood combination draws the most praise, with reviewers describing it as one of the most comforting drydowns in the designer category. One reviewer noted that it shares DNA with Chloe EDP, which makes sense given the same perfumer's involvement, though Rose Gold trades Chloe's powdery rose for warmer, woodier territory.
The limited-edition status cuts both ways. Collectors appreciate the exclusivity and the gorgeous bottle, but the scarcity has pushed prices well above what most consider reasonable for a fragrance with modest longevity. Several reviewers note that while the scent itself is lovely, paying secondary-market prices for a three-hour skin scent requires careful consideration.
Body Rose Gold suits women who value subtlety, comfort, and personal fragrance experiences over statement-making projection. If you gravitate toward soft woods, clean musks, and creamy vanilla -- the kind of scents that make you want to curl up with a book -- this delivers beautifully. Fans of Chloe EDP, Burberry Body Intense, and similar cozy-woody compositions will find a kindred spirit here.
Those who need strong performance, loud sillage, or a fragrance that lasts from morning to night should look elsewhere. And be realistic about pricing: if a bottle surfaces at a reasonable cost, it is worth grabbing. At inflated collector prices, only the truly devoted should commit.
Burberry Body Rose Gold is a beautiful, intimate, comforting fragrance that does exactly one thing and does it well: it makes you smell like warmth itself. The limited availability and inconsistent longevity are legitimate concerns, but the scent inside the bottle is genuinely lovely. If you can find it without overpaying, it is one of the best cozy-weather companions in the designer space.
Consensus Rating
7.8/10
Community Sentiment
mixedSources Analyzed
5 community posts (2 Reddit) (3 forum)
This review is based on analysis of 5 community discussions. Individual experiences may vary.