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Aoud Line

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Aoud Line

Oud done Mancera's way means bold, unapologetic, and polished enough for candlelit evenings. Mancera Aoud Line, an Eau de Parfum released in 2014, was composed by Pierre Montale and sits squarely in the house's oriental woody tradition. It brings genuine agarwood character to the foreground, softened by Turkish rose and warmed by vanilla from the first spray. Aromatica carries the Mancera Aoud Line decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes, so you can test it properly.

Fragrance Notes

Top: Agarwood (Oud), Turkish Rose, Vanilla

Heart: Teak Wood, Patchouli, Sandalwood

Base: Raspberry, Amber

The Scent

Raw and resinous from the first moment, Aoud Line opens with agarwood leading without apology. On first contact it carries that slightly animalic, almost medicinal edge that real oud brings before it settles. Turkish rose comes in quickly alongside it, keeping the opening from feeling purely dark or austere. The vanilla in the top adds a creamy thread that rounds the early sharpness without sweetening it into gourmand territory.

As the first fifteen minutes pass, the oud softens and the heart begins to reveal itself. Teak wood and sandalwood give the composition a smooth, dry-wood foundation that props the rose up rather than burying it. Patchouli adds depth and a subtle earthy quality, though it stays well behind the oud and never turns the fragrance dark or muddy. The teak wood in particular contributes a clean, almost lacquered texture that bridges the resinous oud above and the warmer base materials below. This is where Aoud Line starts to feel more coherent and wearable, as the initial resinous bite mellows into something more elegant. The sandalwood quietly amplifies the creamy thread introduced by the vanilla, carrying it forward into the heart so the transition feels seamless rather than abrupt.

By the thirty-minute mark, a soft powdery quality emerges. The oud remains the dominant presence throughout, but it has become rounder and warmer. Raspberry arrives in the base and this is one of the more surprising notes in the composition. It does not read as fruity in an obvious way; instead it adds a slightly tart, almost jammy sweetness that blends with amber to give the dry-down a rich, polished finish. The amber here is warm rather than sharp, functioning as a soft cradle that holds the oud and raspberry together in the later stages rather than asserting itself as a standalone note. This interplay between the tart fruit and the warm resin is what gives the dry-down its particular character: darker than a typical rose oud but more approachable than a raw agarwood soliflore. The patchouli, having stayed restrained through the heart, lends enough shadow to keep the base from reading as sweet rather than rich.

The raw oud phase can read challenging on first encounter and may benefit from a few minutes to settle, while that initial blast is precisely what draws others in. Patience rewards either way: the dry-down is considerably more approachable than the opening suggests, and the amber-raspberry base tends to win over even those who find the opening difficult. It reads as distinctly oud-forward rather than a safe, sweetened interpretation. The rose never fully disappears, either; it continues threading through the heart and into the base as a floral anchor that keeps the composition from reading as purely woody or resinous. That persistent rose is worth noting because it prevents the oud from ever feeling one-dimensional, offering a quiet floral counterpoint at every stage of the development.

When to Wear

Aoud Line suits cooler weather, from autumn through winter, when heavier oriental compositions carry best. It belongs in evening settings, formal dinners, or occasions where you want your scent to make a clear statement rather than blend into the background. It would feel out of place on a humid summer afternoon but at home in a candlelit room in December.

Who Is It For

Someone who actively seeks genuine oud character, not a sanitized, synthetic approximation, and who appreciates how a dark opening can evolve into something unexpectedly soft and refined by the dry-down will find Aoud Line particularly rewarding.

If you enjoy Black Gold from Mancera, the two share that dark, resinous oriental DNA and are worth placing side by side. Browse the full Mancera collection at Aromatica.

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

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From $140.70

Original: $402.00

-65%
Aoud Line

$402.00

$140.70

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Description

Oud done Mancera's way means bold, unapologetic, and polished enough for candlelit evenings. Mancera Aoud Line, an Eau de Parfum released in 2014, was composed by Pierre Montale and sits squarely in the house's oriental woody tradition. It brings genuine agarwood character to the foreground, softened by Turkish rose and warmed by vanilla from the first spray. Aromatica carries the Mancera Aoud Line decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes, so you can test it properly.

Fragrance Notes

Top: Agarwood (Oud), Turkish Rose, Vanilla

Heart: Teak Wood, Patchouli, Sandalwood

Base: Raspberry, Amber

The Scent

Raw and resinous from the first moment, Aoud Line opens with agarwood leading without apology. On first contact it carries that slightly animalic, almost medicinal edge that real oud brings before it settles. Turkish rose comes in quickly alongside it, keeping the opening from feeling purely dark or austere. The vanilla in the top adds a creamy thread that rounds the early sharpness without sweetening it into gourmand territory.

As the first fifteen minutes pass, the oud softens and the heart begins to reveal itself. Teak wood and sandalwood give the composition a smooth, dry-wood foundation that props the rose up rather than burying it. Patchouli adds depth and a subtle earthy quality, though it stays well behind the oud and never turns the fragrance dark or muddy. The teak wood in particular contributes a clean, almost lacquered texture that bridges the resinous oud above and the warmer base materials below. This is where Aoud Line starts to feel more coherent and wearable, as the initial resinous bite mellows into something more elegant. The sandalwood quietly amplifies the creamy thread introduced by the vanilla, carrying it forward into the heart so the transition feels seamless rather than abrupt.

By the thirty-minute mark, a soft powdery quality emerges. The oud remains the dominant presence throughout, but it has become rounder and warmer. Raspberry arrives in the base and this is one of the more surprising notes in the composition. It does not read as fruity in an obvious way; instead it adds a slightly tart, almost jammy sweetness that blends with amber to give the dry-down a rich, polished finish. The amber here is warm rather than sharp, functioning as a soft cradle that holds the oud and raspberry together in the later stages rather than asserting itself as a standalone note. This interplay between the tart fruit and the warm resin is what gives the dry-down its particular character: darker than a typical rose oud but more approachable than a raw agarwood soliflore. The patchouli, having stayed restrained through the heart, lends enough shadow to keep the base from reading as sweet rather than rich.

The raw oud phase can read challenging on first encounter and may benefit from a few minutes to settle, while that initial blast is precisely what draws others in. Patience rewards either way: the dry-down is considerably more approachable than the opening suggests, and the amber-raspberry base tends to win over even those who find the opening difficult. It reads as distinctly oud-forward rather than a safe, sweetened interpretation. The rose never fully disappears, either; it continues threading through the heart and into the base as a floral anchor that keeps the composition from reading as purely woody or resinous. That persistent rose is worth noting because it prevents the oud from ever feeling one-dimensional, offering a quiet floral counterpoint at every stage of the development.

When to Wear

Aoud Line suits cooler weather, from autumn through winter, when heavier oriental compositions carry best. It belongs in evening settings, formal dinners, or occasions where you want your scent to make a clear statement rather than blend into the background. It would feel out of place on a humid summer afternoon but at home in a candlelit room in December.

Who Is It For

Someone who actively seeks genuine oud character, not a sanitized, synthetic approximation, and who appreciates how a dark opening can evolve into something unexpectedly soft and refined by the dry-down will find Aoud Line particularly rewarding.

If you enjoy Black Gold from Mancera, the two share that dark, resinous oriental DNA and are worth placing side by side. Browse the full Mancera collection at Aromatica.

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

Aoud Line | Aromatica