
Aventus
Launched in 2010 to mark the 250th anniversary of the House of Creed, Aventus Eau de Parfum became one of the most referenced fragrances in modern perfumery almost immediately after release. It drew from the biography of Napoleon Bonaparte, the ambition and triumph of it translating into a scent that opens bright and fruity before settling into something smokier and more complex. Aromatica carries the Creed Aventus decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes, so you can try a proper amount at its notoriously premium price.
Fragrance Notes
Top: Bergamot, Black Currant, Apple, Lemon, Pink Pepper
Heart: Pineapple, Patchouli, Moroccan Jasmine
Base: Birch, Musk, Oak Moss, Cedarwood, Ambroxan
The Scent
Pineapple arrives first, fast and loud, backed by crisp apple and tart blackcurrant that give the whole thing a juicy, almost carbonated quality. Bergamot and lemon keep it from going sweet, pulling it toward something brighter and more citric instead. Pink pepper adds a quiet bite underneath, more texture than spice. For the first fifteen to twenty minutes you are wearing a confident, polished fruit accord that reads fresh rather than gourmand.
Then the birch starts showing up. This is the note that defines Aventus and the one that generates the most discussion. Smoky birch pulls the fragrance away from that cheerful fruity opening and into something drier, more serious, and genuinely distinctive. The pineapple does not disappear entirely, but it recedes into the background as the smoke takes over the middle of the wear. Moroccan jasmine adds a subtle floral thread without ever becoming recognisably floral on skin. Most people would not name it if they were not looking for it.
As the heart develops, the interplay between the retreating fruit and the rising smoke gives Aventus its particular tension. The pineapple softens into something almost honeyed rather than sharp, while the birch stays dry and slightly acrid, creating a back-and-forth that keeps the fragrance from reading as either purely fresh or purely dark. It is this transition phase, somewhere between the bright opening and the settled dry-down, where Aventus tends to make its strongest impression.
Patchouli and cedarwood build out the woody foundation in the dry-down. Patchouli in particular does not read as dark or earthy here, it operates more as a subtle anchor that keeps the fruity top from feeling weightless. Cedarwood sits beneath it, dry and clean, giving the base a structural solidity. Ambroxan gives the whole base a salty, skin-close warmth that reads as a kind of clean masculinity. The musk is restrained, not powdery, and oak moss adds enough earthiness to ground what might otherwise feel too polished. The contrast between the bright, tropical opening and the smoky, woody dry-down is the point of the fragrance, and it is a contrast that unfolds gradually rather than abruptly.
One important note: batch variation is a real and much-discussed feature of Aventus. Older batches, particularly pre-2016, are described as having deeper, more pronounced smoke and birch. Newer batches tend to read as brighter and fruitier, with pineapple and apple more forward. Neither version is inherently better, but if you have tested Aventus before and formed an opinion, the batch you smell may behave differently from what you remember. Some wearers actively seek out specific batch numbers, which is unusual for a fragrance still in active production, and speaks to how much the formula has shifted over fifteen years. It can read sweet or sharp depending on skin chemistry and batch, which means two people wearing the same bottle can have meaningfully different experiences.
When to Wear
Autumn and spring are the strongest fits, specifically for meetings, interviews, or any situation where you want to be noticed without being loud. The smoky base makes it feel too heavy for peak summer heat, and too fruity for deep midwinter evenings. Browse the For Him collection for other strong daytime options.
Who Is It For
Anyone who follows the fragrance world closely and wants to understand what all the conversation is about firsthand, or someone who has smelled it on others and has been trying to identify it ever since.
If you enjoy Green Irish Tweed, another Creed pillar built around a similarly distinctive DNA, it makes for a useful comparison from the same house. Browse the full Creed collection at Aromatica.
Available as an authentic decant in Bangladesh at Aromatica in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml.
Original: $1,749.00
-65%$1,749.00
$612.15Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
Launched in 2010 to mark the 250th anniversary of the House of Creed, Aventus Eau de Parfum became one of the most referenced fragrances in modern perfumery almost immediately after release. It drew from the biography of Napoleon Bonaparte, the ambition and triumph of it translating into a scent that opens bright and fruity before settling into something smokier and more complex. Aromatica carries the Creed Aventus decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes, so you can try a proper amount at its notoriously premium price.
Fragrance Notes
Top: Bergamot, Black Currant, Apple, Lemon, Pink Pepper
Heart: Pineapple, Patchouli, Moroccan Jasmine
Base: Birch, Musk, Oak Moss, Cedarwood, Ambroxan
The Scent
Pineapple arrives first, fast and loud, backed by crisp apple and tart blackcurrant that give the whole thing a juicy, almost carbonated quality. Bergamot and lemon keep it from going sweet, pulling it toward something brighter and more citric instead. Pink pepper adds a quiet bite underneath, more texture than spice. For the first fifteen to twenty minutes you are wearing a confident, polished fruit accord that reads fresh rather than gourmand.
Then the birch starts showing up. This is the note that defines Aventus and the one that generates the most discussion. Smoky birch pulls the fragrance away from that cheerful fruity opening and into something drier, more serious, and genuinely distinctive. The pineapple does not disappear entirely, but it recedes into the background as the smoke takes over the middle of the wear. Moroccan jasmine adds a subtle floral thread without ever becoming recognisably floral on skin. Most people would not name it if they were not looking for it.
As the heart develops, the interplay between the retreating fruit and the rising smoke gives Aventus its particular tension. The pineapple softens into something almost honeyed rather than sharp, while the birch stays dry and slightly acrid, creating a back-and-forth that keeps the fragrance from reading as either purely fresh or purely dark. It is this transition phase, somewhere between the bright opening and the settled dry-down, where Aventus tends to make its strongest impression.
Patchouli and cedarwood build out the woody foundation in the dry-down. Patchouli in particular does not read as dark or earthy here, it operates more as a subtle anchor that keeps the fruity top from feeling weightless. Cedarwood sits beneath it, dry and clean, giving the base a structural solidity. Ambroxan gives the whole base a salty, skin-close warmth that reads as a kind of clean masculinity. The musk is restrained, not powdery, and oak moss adds enough earthiness to ground what might otherwise feel too polished. The contrast between the bright, tropical opening and the smoky, woody dry-down is the point of the fragrance, and it is a contrast that unfolds gradually rather than abruptly.
One important note: batch variation is a real and much-discussed feature of Aventus. Older batches, particularly pre-2016, are described as having deeper, more pronounced smoke and birch. Newer batches tend to read as brighter and fruitier, with pineapple and apple more forward. Neither version is inherently better, but if you have tested Aventus before and formed an opinion, the batch you smell may behave differently from what you remember. Some wearers actively seek out specific batch numbers, which is unusual for a fragrance still in active production, and speaks to how much the formula has shifted over fifteen years. It can read sweet or sharp depending on skin chemistry and batch, which means two people wearing the same bottle can have meaningfully different experiences.
When to Wear
Autumn and spring are the strongest fits, specifically for meetings, interviews, or any situation where you want to be noticed without being loud. The smoky base makes it feel too heavy for peak summer heat, and too fruity for deep midwinter evenings. Browse the For Him collection for other strong daytime options.
Who Is It For
Anyone who follows the fragrance world closely and wants to understand what all the conversation is about firsthand, or someone who has smelled it on others and has been trying to identify it ever since.
If you enjoy Green Irish Tweed, another Creed pillar built around a similarly distinctive DNA, it makes for a useful comparison from the same house. Browse the full Creed collection at Aromatica.
Available as an authentic decant in Bangladesh at Aromatica in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml.











