"For me, it's a great joy to smell a fragrance I did for men, worn by a woman. A perfume should never be reserved for one sex because smells have no sex," [Mathilde Laurent] told me at the New York City launch of Cartier's new eau de parfum, L'Envol, which is technically for men but something I'd wear in a heartbeat...Though we were sitting at a table with the marketing team, Laurent's role is the art of the juice itself, and she wasn't afraid to say that the separation of categories is just a ploy. It's not uncommon for a company to use clichés—it's a business after all—but she said Cartier works to avoid them. "It's an old habit to put a naked woman or man on the advertising to tell you, 'It's for you!' We have come to a kind of caricature of being a woman or man in perfume, but like our society, there's no reason to separate," she said.
— Perfumer Mathilde Laurent of Cartier talks about gendered fragrances in Here's What One French Perfumer Has to Say About Women Wearing Men's Fragrances at Allure.
http://www.sirc.org/publik/smell.pdf
This is a link to a Smell Report that is interesting but ( scientifically ) pretty simple. The research comes from a think tank in Oxford. Good weekend reading if you don’t know it.
Personally, i like men’s scents because in terms of ‘mainstream/ department store ‘ scents… Which is what i have access to…they are often better and cheaper than women’s. Terre de Hermes, Dior Homme, Chanel edition Blanche etc. All good and half the price of the female range.