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An Ouducation Part Two, Including a Review + Giveaway of Nirvana by Evocative Perfumes

Posted on September 17, 2015 by FeministConfessional

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Cut agarwood. Photo borrowed from Basenotes, source unknown.

Cut agarwood. Photo borrowed from Basenotes, source unknown.

Previously on Perfume Polytechnic…

In Part One of this post I confessed that I wasn’t sure what oud (aka agarwood) smelt like, after I was sent a sample of Evocative Perfumes’ latest fragrance, Nirvana. I wanted to be able to give Nirvana an honest and decent review, so I set about on a study of oud, an ouducation, so to speak. In my last post, I researched and wrote about oud, where it comes from, how it is harvested and extracted, the different uses for oud and what other people think oud smells like.

You can read Part One of An Ouducation here.

Oud Fragrances

As part of my quest to learn to identify oud, I investigated what other perfume enthusiasts think oud smells like. I asked some members of one of the largest Facebook fragrance groups, Facebook Fragrance Friends (FFF), what they thought. The descriptions I got were wide-ranging and varied: from blue cheese to band-aids, antique wooden furniture to manure, and smoke to iodine. “Hmm” I thought to myself, “such a multifaceted smell might be difficult to detect in a perfume.” Nevertheless, I wasn’t deterred. I decided to go to two large department stores in Melbourne, armed with suggestions from FFF about what to try, and find a number of oud fragrances to smell. I wanted to see if I could find a common note among all of these fragrances and finally pin down the smell of oud.

Tom Ford’s Ouds: Oud Wood, Oud Fleur and Tobacco Oud

Oud-Fleur-Tom-Ford-Perfume

Tom Ford’s Oud range. Photo borrowed from: http://www.aperfume.info/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/Oud-Fleur-Tom-Ford-Perfume-370×260.jpg

These three fragrances are from the Private Blend range by Tom Ford. Tom Ford isn’t normally a perfumer I go for (I’m too broke), but how can I resist trying three perfumes with “oud” clearly printed on the label? Surely from sniffing these three my nose will get some idea of what oud smells like?

Kind of.

In Tobacco Oud the tobacco dominates, in Oud Fleur I smell a fecal rose, and in Oud Wood, I’m distracted by dry and airy woods and spice. The perfumes share a dark, moody woodiness, an intensity of character, a lush and exotic richness and a hint of bitter grubbiness. But the oud note itself doesn’t jump out at me or smell the same in each fragrance. Perhaps the plethora of other ingredients, and the different focus for each of these oud fragrances actually obscures the oud note a little? Perhaps Tom Ford is trying to show a range of uses for this ingredient rather than aiming towards identifiability and homogeneity? I’m reminded that tuberose, which I can identify easily, can smell very different in a range of settings and fragrance compositions, from indolic and overbearing, to slightly medicinal, to adding merely a hint of feminine sweetness to a fragrance. Fragrance ingredients are not always mono-dimensional, particularly natural ingredients, but is real oud oil used in these fragrances? For the price, I would hope so, but I’m not sure that it is.

I continue my quest…

Mecca Cosmetica and Le Labo’s Oud 27

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Le Labo’s Oud 27. Photo borrowed from Basenotes: http://www.basenotes.net/ID26130501.html

Upon entering Mecca Cosmetica, I discover Byredo’s Accord Oud, and spray keenly onto a tester card. The knowledgeable and helpful sales assistant notices that I’m writing the name of the fragrance on the card, and asks if I need assistance. I explain that I’m trying to figure out what oud smells like for a blog post I’m writing. He immediately leads me away from the Byredo and over to Le Labo’s Oud 27, explaining that of Mecca’s range of fragrances, this is the closest thing to real oud. I’d forgotten about Oud 27 and that I had indeed sniffed this fragrance many times before, particularly in my early days of becoming obsessed with fragrance. I love Oud 27. To me, it smells like the inside of an old oak barrel that’s been impregnated with the scent of batch after batch of maturing red wine. As a child I frequented the Barossa Valley wine district in South Australia with my family, visiting cellar doors and going on winery tours. Oud 27 reminds me of being in cool, damp underground cellars full of gigantic oak barrels. The fragrance is also a tad fecal and smells very much like antique wooden furniture.

I try a few other oud fragrances including Terry de Gunzburg’s Terryfic Oud, which is overloaded with ambroxan to the near exclusion of all other ingredients and which just about kills my nose; Amouage’s Epic Woman, which reminds me of Tocade with a hint of caraway; Kurkdjian’s Oud, which smells woody, sweet and a bit caramelised; and Creed’s Royal Oud, which is a light fougère with some generic woods.

At the end of all this I’m still feeling somewhat baffled. Oud 27 comes the closest so far to the descriptions I’ve heard about oud. The Tom Ford Oud range collectively seems to have a dark and exotic character, and although I can smell similarities between the fragrances, I can’t quite detect a distinct oud note that is the same in each fragrance. As for the other oud fragrances, they don’t seem to embody or represent many of the common descriptors used for oud, nor is there an obvious, common note among them all.

Part of my conundrum is that real oud is too expensive to be used by most perfumers, so synthetic substitutions or amalgams of other ingredients are used to represent oud. But what do these substitutions smell like? If a certain aroma chemical is used regularly by perfumers, I can’t spot it. I’m used to smelling synthetic rose, jasmine, and orris regularly in perfumes, and to being able to identify them, so I can’t quite work out why oud is so different, and why there seems to be little consistency from one fragrance to the next. Perhaps it’s hard to fake because the real thing is so complex and multi-faceted?

I decide to wait for Mark Evans’ real oud oil samples to arrive, so that I can have the genuine article to refer to when I go perfume sniffing next time.

What Real Oud Smells Like

Gaharu Tea Valley - Agarwood (Oud) Forest

Gaharu Tea Valley – Agarwood (Oud) Forest

Mark Evans, perfumer at Evocative Perfumes, an Australian independent perfume house, kindly offered to send me some real oud oil when I told him of my conundrum. Not one, but two types. When they arrived I applied both kinds of oud to my skin and allowed them to warm and develop, taking notes about how they smelt at various stages.

My initial reaction to the two ouds (one is possibly Cambodian) was that they were very different from one another.

Oud 1

This oud is darker in colour, thicker and stickier than oud 2. It smells like old wood, somewhat like the inside of a varnished, heavy antique chest, and it’s camphoraceous, a bit like pine, and almost minty. It’s also quite cheesy, like a ripe, gooey, stinky French cheese. I’m surprised by the camphoraceous and mentholic aspects of this oud as I’ve not heard of oud being described in this way before. I can detect a slightly medicinal aspect to the smell, and it’s somewhat bitter and a little bit mouldy too. Overall, this is a very deep, dark, rich, woody ingredient, with fascinating complexity and unexpected qualities. It smells like a complete perfume in itself, as if several distinctly different perfume notes have been combined.

Oud 2

Oud 2 is lighter, thinner and less sticky than oud 1, and is not as complex. This oud is dominated by the smell of band-aids, light woody notes, with a hint of rotting wood. It’s ever so slightly fecal, and is quite sweet and honeyed. It reminds me very much of the band-aid note in Serge Lutens’ Daim Blond.

Ambroxan

Mark also sent a sample of ambroxan 10% in alcohol for me to sniff, as I was certain perfumers were using ambroxan regularly in oud fragrances. The ambroxan smells like smoky wood. It’s light and airy, subtle, and not very complex. It has a definite woodiness about it, and smells a tiny bit like the woody aspects of oud, so I can imagine that it may be used in some oud fragrances, especially those that combine other ingredients to recreate oud, instead of using the real thing.

Comparison between real oud and the commercial oud fragrances I’ve smelled

After smelling the two real oud oils, I can comment that none of the commercial fragrances that I smelt last week are particularly reminiscent of the real ouds. The two oils are so complex and rich and have distinct qualities about them that aren’t reflected much in the perfumes. The Oud 27 and the Tom Ford range of Ouds probably come closest in “vibe” to how natural oud smells, without either of them smelling much like the real deal, although Oud 27 is animalic and woody. I’m not sure whether any of these fragrances uses real oud. They might, or they might claim to, but I doubt we’ll ever know for sure.

I must also add that as I’ve only smelt two types of real oud oil, I’m still no expert on this matter. I’ve read that there are many kinds of oud, and that they can smell quite different to one another. Make of this what you will, but I shall conclude this comparison by stating that my experience so far has taught me that oud is a hard ingredient to replicate in a fragrance, and that most commercially available perfumes don’t even come close. That is, until I smelt Nirvana by Evocative Perfumes.

Nirvana by Evocative Perfumes

NewNirvana12mlOil-375x490

Nirvana by Evocative Perfumes

Nirvana is the newest release from Mark Evans, perfumer at Australian indie brand Evocative Perfumes. Nirvana celebrates and encapsulates the true characteristics of oud, although it doesn’t contain any real oud. Not a drop. The description for Nirvana is as follows:

“There are many, many fragrances out there with oud or agarwood as one of the featured notes. Of course there is never any actual real oud oil in these fragrances as it is way too expensive. The oud note that wearers have come to expect is a fantasy and not really anything like the experience of real, genuine oud oil. Nirvana is my attempt to provide you with this experience. I’ve used a high proportion of natural ingredients,  blended to provide the incredible richness of the funky, cheesy top note and the floral, rosy, jamminess and dry deep woodiness of a real, sticky, Cambodian oud.” (Source: Evocative Perfumes website)

What Nirvana Smells Like

I put a dab on the back of my hand and rub the perfume oil gently into my skin. I smell a light antiseptic note, a funky cheesy smell that’s present but not overpowering, dry antique woods, and a sweet band-aid smell. Something ever-so-slightly camphoraceous or even minty-fresh lurks in the background. A boozy, wine-barrel effect is somewhat present at first too, but it isn’t as strong as that in Oud 27 by Le Labo. Nirvana is rich, nuanced, and complex. It has animalic overtones and a vintage air about it.

How does it compare with the two oud oils Mark sent me to sniff? Nirvana is most like Oud 1, but is lighter, sweeter and more wearable. It shares its cheesy top note, and its deep woodiness. It shares medicinal qualities with Oud 2, and has a similar warmth.

Mark Evans’ Nirvana also features rose, which, along with the oud forms a classic Middle-Eastern style pairing. The rose adds futher complexity and a touch of sweetness to the composition.

The notes for Nirvana are listed as follows: funk, jammy notes, rose, oud, sandalwood.

Mark Evans has created a brilliantly believable replica of real oud with Nirvana. Of the ten or so commercial oud fragrances that I tried, none came anywhere near as close to smelling of real oud as Nirvana does. Fans of oud, or perfume lovers who want to try a realistic oud fragrance should try Nirvana.

Nirvana is a great unisex fragrance, and radiates really well for an oil-based fragrance. It also lasts a good 3-4 hours on my skin.

Nirvana comes in a 12ml bottle of perfume oil and sells for $40 AUD. You can buy it at the Evocative Perfumes Website. Samples are also available at $4 a pop.

To read an interview with Mark Evans and learn more about his process as a perfumer, click here.

Nirvana Giveaway

Two Samples of Nirvana are up for grabs as part of Perfume Polytechnic’s First Birthday Giveaway. To enter, click on this link and scroll down the page to find the instructions on how to place your entry.

Terms & Conditions

Entry is open to followers of Perfume Polytechnic only. Competition closes Wednesday the 23rd September at 5pm AEST. I will draw two winners using random.org on the 24th September, will announce the winners here and on Facebook, and will try to contact you privately through email, your Gravatar, or Facebook. Prizes will be redrawn if winners do not respond within 7 days.


Acknowledgements & Conclusion

My warmest thanks go out to Mark Evans of Evocative perfumes for providing my sample of Nirvana, which inspired me to set forth on a grand ouducation. I wouldn’t and couldn’t have done it without you Mark, and I’ve had such fun on the journey. If I hadn’t received Mark’s sample, I might have just dismissed oud as another trendy ingredient that I didn’t understand, but instead, I feel that I now have a better understanding of oud, the issues surrounding its use in perfumery, and a genuine appreciation for the real article. I hope that you’ve also learnt a bit about oud along the way. Mark has also generously provided the two samples of Nirvana for the giveaway, as well as the samples of oud oil and ambroxan that I referred to in this post.

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Posted in Making Perfume, Perfume Ingredients, Perfume Reviews Tagged agar wood, agarwood, agarwood in medicine, agarwood incense, agarwood tea, Amouage Epic Woman, aoud, Aquilaria, Aquilaria sinensis, Australian artisan perfume, Australian indie perfume, Byredo Accord Oud, cambodian oud, Creed Royal Oud, Evocative Perfumes, Evocative Perfumes Nirvana, Evocative Perfumes Nirvana review, Evocative Perfumes Oud, Facebook Fragrance Friends, gaharu, gaharuwood, gyrinops, identifying perfume ingredients, Kurkdjian Oud, Le Labo Oud 27, mark evans evocative perfumes interview, Mark Evans Nirvana review, Mark Evans perfumer, mark evans perfumer interview, Mecca Cosmetica, nirvana perfume review, oud, oud in medicine, oud in perfumery, oud incense, oud perfume review, perfumery ingredients, terry de Gunzburg Terryfic Oud, Tom Ford Oud, Tom Ford Oud Fleur, Tom Ford Oud Wood, Tom Ford Private Blend, Tom Ford Tobacco Oud, What does agarwood smell like?, what does oud oil smell like, what does oud smell like?, What oud smells like, What real oud smells like

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