
Sergio Momo founded Xerjoff in Turin in 2003 and has shaped the brand’s compositions from inception. His Sicily Collection (Erba Pura, Mefisto, Uden) ranks among the most-recommended niche sub-lines of the 2010s, and his broader work has defined the modern compliment-magnet niche category. Below is a profile of his approach and the affordable Fragrenza alternatives that capture his most-cited compositions.
Momo’s signature aesthetic
Momo’s compositions trade on lush photogenic character — bright openings, polished hearts, substantively glowing bases. Where Becker pursues architectural restraint, Momo pursues polished abundance — compositions that feel generous without going aggressive.
The Sicily Collection exemplifies this: Erba Pura’s bright citrus-and-fruit opening glows beautifully against the ambergris-vanilla base; Mefisto’s polished aromatic opening transitions smoothly into the iris-amber heart; Uden’s boozy rum-coffee character anchors confident cool-weather evening wear. Each composition feels intentionally crafted but accessible — the magic combination that has made Xerjoff a compliment-magnet niche brand.
Momo’s most-cited compositions and their dupes
Xerjoff Erba Pura (2013)
The Sicily Collection’s commercial pillar — bright citrus, ambiguous fruity heart, ambergris-and-Bourbon-vanilla base. Among the most-cited niche compliment-magnets in continuous production. Captured by Xerjoff Erba Pura dupe.
Xerjoff Mefisto (2014)
The more aromatic-restrained Sicily Collection entry — polished citrus, iris-lavender-rose heart, amber-musk-sandalwood-cedar base. Captured by Xerjoff Mefisto dupe.
Xerjoff Uden (Shooting Stars Collection)
The brand’s more indulgent direction — citrus, rum-coffee heart, sandalwood-guaiac-vanilla-musk base. Captured by Xerjoff Uden dupe.
Xerjoff Lira
The polished lemon-vanilla Sicily Collection direction. Captured by Xerjoff Lira dupe.
The Sergio Momo approach
What makes Momo distinctive within modern niche perfumery is his commitment to lush photogenic compositions that look as carefully designed as they smell. The Xerjoff brand identity — ornate gold caps, luxury packaging, photogenic juice colors — extends Momo’s olfactive sensibility into product design.
This carefully-designed-aesthetic philosophy means Xerjoff compositions often draw attention before they’re even worn. The brand’s success at the niche-luxury price tier comes partly from Momo’s understanding that modern wearers want their fragrance choices to be visible-as-well-as-olfactive statements.
Building a Sergio Momo-style collection
A two-bottle Momo collection captures the brand’s main directions: Xerjoff Erba Pura dupe for the compliment-magnet bright daily wear, and Xerjoff Uden dupe for confident cool-weather evening wear. Add Xerjoff Mefisto dupe for refined aromatic-restrained daily wear and you’ve captured most of the Sicily Collection’s reach.
What Momo’s work tells us about modern niche perfumery
Momo’s commercial success — particularly the cult following around Erba Pura — suggests that the modern niche market rewards lush photogenic compositions. Xerjoff’s reputation for polished glowing character matches what modern wearers most consistently request: scents that read “expensive” at conversational distance.
For wearers exploring niche perfumery, the Xerjoff catalogue is among the easier entry points. The polished accessible character makes the compositions easier to appreciate than denser niche orientals, and the brand’s commercial success has produced a substantial dupe market that captures the signature character at affordable pricing.