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Ambre Precieux

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Ambre Precieux

Few amber fragrances carry as much authority as Ambre Precieux by Maitre Parfumeur et Gantier, the Eau de Parfum launched in 1988 by the French house founded by Jean-Francois Laporte. This is the original, the one that Ambre Precieux Ultime (2014) was built to extend. It belongs to a tradition of classical amber composition that treats resinous warmth as a complete statement rather than a supporting role. Aromatica carries the Maitre Parfumeur et Gantier Ambre Precieux decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes.

Fragrance Notes

Top: Myrrh, Lavender

Heart: Vanilla, Nutmeg

Base: Amber, Tolu Balsam, Peru Balsam

The Scent

Myrrh and lavender arrive together from the first breath, which sounds odd until you smell it: the lavender is herbal and slightly medicinal, and the myrrh leans resinous rather than smoky, and between them they hold off the sweetness long enough to make you lean in. It does not read as an aromatic fragrance, even though lavender is right there at the top. What you actually register is depth forming beneath an aromatic haze. Within the first fifteen to twenty minutes, nutmeg and vanilla begin moving through, and the composition starts to reveal what it actually is: a warm, resinous oriental built on balsamic material, not on sugar. The nutmeg is dry and slightly woody, keeping the vanilla from turning gourmand. This is an important distinction because the vanilla in Ambre Precieux is not a dessert note. It is close to the skin, slightly powdery, and more creamy than sweet.

The transition from opening to heart is gradual rather than abrupt. The lavender does not disappear so much as it recedes, its herbal character softening as the resinous materials rise to meet it. Myrrh acts as the quiet bridge here, threading through the shift and lending the middle phase a low incense quality that prevents the vanilla and nutmeg from reading as simple spiced sweetness. By the time you reach the heart of the fragrance, the amber accord has become the dominant presence. It is not the loud, synthetic amber of many modern compositions. It has a naturalistic warmth, the kind that rises from skin rather than projecting off it. Tolu balsam and Peru balsam form the structural base, and they bring a balsamic depth that is thick without being cloying, sweet without being sugary.

It can read as the most balanced amber a wearer has encountered, or the balsamic-vanillic axis can feel too linear and too predictable, depending on what you bring to it. Both reactions are legitimate. The drydown is slow and gentle: incense-like resin fades back, and what remains is that amber-vanilla core hovering close to the skin, soft and balsamic, somewhere between a classic oriental and a modern skin scent. The myrrh, which anchored the opening, does not vanish entirely. It becomes the quiet connective tissue between the resinous base and the fading lavender haze above it, lending the fragrance a low-level smokiness that keeps the sweetness from reading as uncomplicated. As the hours pass, the balsams deepen further, and the whole composition settles into a quiet, skin-close warmth that carries the resinous character of the opening through to the end. The interplay between myrrh and the balsamic base is what distinguishes Ambre Precieux from simpler amber constructions: the resinous thread is there at the start, present through the heart, and still discernible when everything else has quieted. That continuity gives the composition a coherence that rewards patience and repeated wear.

When to Wear

Ambre Precieux is built for cooler weather: autumn evenings, winter days, and the kind of early spring nights that still carry a chill. It suits quiet, intimate settings, a dinner at home, a slow cafe afternoon, or an evening occasion where you want presence without loudness. Browse the Cozy and Cold Weather collection at Aromatica for more fragrances in this register.

Who Is It For

Anyone who wears amber regularly, knows what balsamic resin smells like on skin, and wants a classical French take on the genre rather than a modern sweetened interpretation. A fragrance for people who have moved past the designer amber category and are looking for something with genuine heritage behind it.

If you enjoy Ambre Royal by Ormonde Jayne, Ambre Precieux sits in the same classical amber family and rewards a direct comparison. You can also explore Ambre Sultan by Serge Lutens, which takes the same resinous territory in a spicier, more assertive direction. Browse the full Maitre Parfumeur et Gantier collection at Aromatica.

Available as an authentic decant in Bangladesh at Aromatica in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml.

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From $336.00

Original: $960.00

-65%
Ambre Precieux

$960.00

$336.00

Product Information

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Description

Few amber fragrances carry as much authority as Ambre Precieux by Maitre Parfumeur et Gantier, the Eau de Parfum launched in 1988 by the French house founded by Jean-Francois Laporte. This is the original, the one that Ambre Precieux Ultime (2014) was built to extend. It belongs to a tradition of classical amber composition that treats resinous warmth as a complete statement rather than a supporting role. Aromatica carries the Maitre Parfumeur et Gantier Ambre Precieux decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes.

Fragrance Notes

Top: Myrrh, Lavender

Heart: Vanilla, Nutmeg

Base: Amber, Tolu Balsam, Peru Balsam

The Scent

Myrrh and lavender arrive together from the first breath, which sounds odd until you smell it: the lavender is herbal and slightly medicinal, and the myrrh leans resinous rather than smoky, and between them they hold off the sweetness long enough to make you lean in. It does not read as an aromatic fragrance, even though lavender is right there at the top. What you actually register is depth forming beneath an aromatic haze. Within the first fifteen to twenty minutes, nutmeg and vanilla begin moving through, and the composition starts to reveal what it actually is: a warm, resinous oriental built on balsamic material, not on sugar. The nutmeg is dry and slightly woody, keeping the vanilla from turning gourmand. This is an important distinction because the vanilla in Ambre Precieux is not a dessert note. It is close to the skin, slightly powdery, and more creamy than sweet.

The transition from opening to heart is gradual rather than abrupt. The lavender does not disappear so much as it recedes, its herbal character softening as the resinous materials rise to meet it. Myrrh acts as the quiet bridge here, threading through the shift and lending the middle phase a low incense quality that prevents the vanilla and nutmeg from reading as simple spiced sweetness. By the time you reach the heart of the fragrance, the amber accord has become the dominant presence. It is not the loud, synthetic amber of many modern compositions. It has a naturalistic warmth, the kind that rises from skin rather than projecting off it. Tolu balsam and Peru balsam form the structural base, and they bring a balsamic depth that is thick without being cloying, sweet without being sugary.

It can read as the most balanced amber a wearer has encountered, or the balsamic-vanillic axis can feel too linear and too predictable, depending on what you bring to it. Both reactions are legitimate. The drydown is slow and gentle: incense-like resin fades back, and what remains is that amber-vanilla core hovering close to the skin, soft and balsamic, somewhere between a classic oriental and a modern skin scent. The myrrh, which anchored the opening, does not vanish entirely. It becomes the quiet connective tissue between the resinous base and the fading lavender haze above it, lending the fragrance a low-level smokiness that keeps the sweetness from reading as uncomplicated. As the hours pass, the balsams deepen further, and the whole composition settles into a quiet, skin-close warmth that carries the resinous character of the opening through to the end. The interplay between myrrh and the balsamic base is what distinguishes Ambre Precieux from simpler amber constructions: the resinous thread is there at the start, present through the heart, and still discernible when everything else has quieted. That continuity gives the composition a coherence that rewards patience and repeated wear.

When to Wear

Ambre Precieux is built for cooler weather: autumn evenings, winter days, and the kind of early spring nights that still carry a chill. It suits quiet, intimate settings, a dinner at home, a slow cafe afternoon, or an evening occasion where you want presence without loudness. Browse the Cozy and Cold Weather collection at Aromatica for more fragrances in this register.

Who Is It For

Anyone who wears amber regularly, knows what balsamic resin smells like on skin, and wants a classical French take on the genre rather than a modern sweetened interpretation. A fragrance for people who have moved past the designer amber category and are looking for something with genuine heritage behind it.

If you enjoy Ambre Royal by Ormonde Jayne, Ambre Precieux sits in the same classical amber family and rewards a direct comparison. You can also explore Ambre Sultan by Serge Lutens, which takes the same resinous territory in a spicier, more assertive direction. Browse the full Maitre Parfumeur et Gantier collection at Aromatica.

Available as an authentic decant in Bangladesh at Aromatica in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml.

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