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B683

Marc-Antoine Barrois trained as a couture designer before he ever touched perfume, and B683 still carries that discipline: a fragrance built like a fitted jacket, tailored close with no wasted fabric. Released in 2016 and composed by Quentin Bisch, it takes its name from the mold reference number on one of Barrois's own sculptural garments, a nod to precision over drama. Aromatica carries the B683 decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes, so you can spend real time with a scent that rewards patience rather than a quick sniff test.

Fragrance Notes

Top: Saffron, Black Pepper, Nutmeg, Red Chilli Pepper

Heart: Violet Leaf, Musk, Labdanum, Amber

Base: Ambroxan, Patchouli, Sandalwood, Oakmoss

The Scent

The first thing the nose registers is heat, not smoke or fire but the dry, prickling heat of ground spice. Red chilli pepper and black pepper arrive together, sharpened by nutmeg, while saffron threads through underneath with its leathery, slightly medicinal edge. There is no citrus to soften the entry, which is unusual for a spiced opening and gives B683 a starkness that some find austere and others find magnetic. Within the first twenty minutes the pepper starts to settle and violet leaf steps in, green and slightly bitter, cutting the spice rather than sweetening it. This is the point where the fragrance splits opinion: on some skin the violet leaf reads cool and metallic, on others it leans closer to crushed stems and damp soil. Musk and labdanum arrive next, rounding the sharp edges into something warmer and slightly resinous, and amber starts to build a soft glow underneath without ever turning sweet or gourmand. The dry-down is where B683 shows its real structure. Ambroxan pushes the composition into skin-like territory, that clean, radiant, almost translucent woodiness that reads more like warmed skin than a traditional wood note. Patchouli and sandalwood settle in alongside it, earthy and creamy respectively, and oakmoss lends a faint mossy shadow that keeps the base from feeling too polished. What lingers for hours is not any single note but the interplay between the ambroxan's transparency and the patchouli's depth, a combination that feels engineered rather than blended.

When to Wear

This suits cold-weather evenings, the kind spent at a dinner where the conversation matters more than the room, or a winter gallery opening where you want to be remembered without saying much. The spice and ambroxan combination reads too intense for humid daytime wear in Dhaka's summer but comes into its own once the weather cools, especially layered under a wool coat. Anyone drawn to the rest of the Marc-Antoine Barrois collection will recognize the same restraint here, tuned toward spice instead of skin musk.

Who Is It For

This suits someone who already owns three black turtlenecks and is looking for a fourth, the kind of wearer who prefers one considered choice over a rotation of ten. It also fits anyone who finds mainstream spiced woods too loud and wants the same warmth without the shout.

If you enjoy Ganymede, its softer, skin-close cousin from the same house, it sits in the same family and is worth comparing, as does the more resinous Tilia. Browse the full Marc-Antoine Barrois collection at Aromatica.

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

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From $380.45

Original: $1,087.00

-65%
B683

$1,087.00

$380.45

Product Information

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Description

Marc-Antoine Barrois trained as a couture designer before he ever touched perfume, and B683 still carries that discipline: a fragrance built like a fitted jacket, tailored close with no wasted fabric. Released in 2016 and composed by Quentin Bisch, it takes its name from the mold reference number on one of Barrois's own sculptural garments, a nod to precision over drama. Aromatica carries the B683 decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes, so you can spend real time with a scent that rewards patience rather than a quick sniff test.

Fragrance Notes

Top: Saffron, Black Pepper, Nutmeg, Red Chilli Pepper

Heart: Violet Leaf, Musk, Labdanum, Amber

Base: Ambroxan, Patchouli, Sandalwood, Oakmoss

The Scent

The first thing the nose registers is heat, not smoke or fire but the dry, prickling heat of ground spice. Red chilli pepper and black pepper arrive together, sharpened by nutmeg, while saffron threads through underneath with its leathery, slightly medicinal edge. There is no citrus to soften the entry, which is unusual for a spiced opening and gives B683 a starkness that some find austere and others find magnetic. Within the first twenty minutes the pepper starts to settle and violet leaf steps in, green and slightly bitter, cutting the spice rather than sweetening it. This is the point where the fragrance splits opinion: on some skin the violet leaf reads cool and metallic, on others it leans closer to crushed stems and damp soil. Musk and labdanum arrive next, rounding the sharp edges into something warmer and slightly resinous, and amber starts to build a soft glow underneath without ever turning sweet or gourmand. The dry-down is where B683 shows its real structure. Ambroxan pushes the composition into skin-like territory, that clean, radiant, almost translucent woodiness that reads more like warmed skin than a traditional wood note. Patchouli and sandalwood settle in alongside it, earthy and creamy respectively, and oakmoss lends a faint mossy shadow that keeps the base from feeling too polished. What lingers for hours is not any single note but the interplay between the ambroxan's transparency and the patchouli's depth, a combination that feels engineered rather than blended.

When to Wear

This suits cold-weather evenings, the kind spent at a dinner where the conversation matters more than the room, or a winter gallery opening where you want to be remembered without saying much. The spice and ambroxan combination reads too intense for humid daytime wear in Dhaka's summer but comes into its own once the weather cools, especially layered under a wool coat. Anyone drawn to the rest of the Marc-Antoine Barrois collection will recognize the same restraint here, tuned toward spice instead of skin musk.

Who Is It For

This suits someone who already owns three black turtlenecks and is looking for a fourth, the kind of wearer who prefers one considered choice over a rotation of ten. It also fits anyone who finds mainstream spiced woods too loud and wants the same warmth without the shout.

If you enjoy Ganymede, its softer, skin-close cousin from the same house, it sits in the same family and is worth comparing, as does the more resinous Tilia. Browse the full Marc-Antoine Barrois collection at Aromatica.

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

B683 | Aromatica