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Fahrenheit Le Parfum

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Fahrenheit Le Parfum

Fahrenheit is one of the most distinctive masculine fragrances ever made, a petrol-and-violet landmark from 1988 that polarised people for decades. When Francois Demachy revisited the line in 2014, he did not amplify the original and call it done. Dior Fahrenheit Le Parfum is a proper parfum concentration, and it takes the character of its predecessor somewhere darker, sweeter, and more deliberately seductive. Aromatica carries the Fahrenheit Le Parfum decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes, so you can wear it before committing.

Fragrance Notes

Top: Suede, Licorice, Sicilian Mandarin

Heart: Violet Leaf, Rum, Coriander, Cumin

Base: Bourbon Vanilla

The Scent

Suede leads rather than citrus, giving the first few seconds a soft, skin-close leather character that feels almost muted. Then the licorice arrives and things get interesting: it is dry and faintly anisic, not sweet candy, and it creates a strange tension with the Sicilian mandarin that stays bright and a little sharp underneath. That combination, leather and licorice and citrus together, reads nothing like a conventional warm-spicy masculine. It is odder, more abstract, more interesting than what you might expect from a flanker of the original. The suede does not recede quickly; it holds its position beneath both the licorice and the mandarin, anchoring the opening in a way that keeps the whole accord feeling grounded rather than airy.

Into the heart, the violet leaf takes over as the dominant note. If you know the original 1988 Fahrenheit, you know the violet-and-petrol accord that made it so divisive. Here Demachy strips out the gasoline edge and replaces it with rum. The result is quieter and more polished: violet leaf spiked with rum and cumin, sitting over the suede from the opening, which has not gone anywhere but has softened into a background warmth. Coriander adds a faint spiced brightness that keeps the heart from feeling one-dimensional. The rum note here is not boozy in isolation; it mingles with the cumin to produce something closer to warm spiced wood than an outright spirit. It can read genuinely arresting or too tame and commercially safe depending on how you feel about the raw original, and that split is worth knowing before you buy.

The dry-down is where it becomes most wearable and also most debated. Bourbon vanilla absolute floods in and turns everything warm and rich. It integrates the rum from the heart beautifully, giving a boozy, almost gourmand quality that is nothing like the austere mineral dryness of the original Fahrenheit. On skin the vanilla reads as genuine and full-bodied rather than synthetic. The leather and spice whisper underneath it as the fragrance settles, keeping the whole thing from going purely sweet. What you end up with is a warm, dark, leathery vanilla with a rum spine that leans much closer to oriental territory than any other entry in the Fahrenheit line. The transition from that dry anisic opening to this rich vanilla finish is the most surprising thing about wearing it: it can feel like a rewarding arc from cool restraint into deep warmth, or the tonal shift between the cool licorice-suede phase and the gourmand close can feel too abrupt, depending on skin and expectation.

When to Wear

Built for cold-weather occasions, this one belongs to autumn evenings and winter nights. The vanilla and rum make it too heavy for warm or humid conditions. Wear it to a dinner, a formal event, or after dark where a rich, enclosing scent feels appropriate rather than overwhelming.

Who Is It For

Best suited to someone who already loves warm oriental masculines with a leather edge, and wants something with more structural complexity than a straightforward vanilla or amber but less confrontation than the original Fahrenheit's raw character.

If you enjoy Dior Homme Intense, the leather-and-sweetness dynamic sits in a similar neighbourhood and makes for a compelling comparison. Browse the full Dior collection at Aromatica.

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

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From $370.65

Original: $1,059.00

-65%
Fahrenheit Le Parfum

$1,059.00

$370.65

Product Information

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Description

Fahrenheit is one of the most distinctive masculine fragrances ever made, a petrol-and-violet landmark from 1988 that polarised people for decades. When Francois Demachy revisited the line in 2014, he did not amplify the original and call it done. Dior Fahrenheit Le Parfum is a proper parfum concentration, and it takes the character of its predecessor somewhere darker, sweeter, and more deliberately seductive. Aromatica carries the Fahrenheit Le Parfum decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes, so you can wear it before committing.

Fragrance Notes

Top: Suede, Licorice, Sicilian Mandarin

Heart: Violet Leaf, Rum, Coriander, Cumin

Base: Bourbon Vanilla

The Scent

Suede leads rather than citrus, giving the first few seconds a soft, skin-close leather character that feels almost muted. Then the licorice arrives and things get interesting: it is dry and faintly anisic, not sweet candy, and it creates a strange tension with the Sicilian mandarin that stays bright and a little sharp underneath. That combination, leather and licorice and citrus together, reads nothing like a conventional warm-spicy masculine. It is odder, more abstract, more interesting than what you might expect from a flanker of the original. The suede does not recede quickly; it holds its position beneath both the licorice and the mandarin, anchoring the opening in a way that keeps the whole accord feeling grounded rather than airy.

Into the heart, the violet leaf takes over as the dominant note. If you know the original 1988 Fahrenheit, you know the violet-and-petrol accord that made it so divisive. Here Demachy strips out the gasoline edge and replaces it with rum. The result is quieter and more polished: violet leaf spiked with rum and cumin, sitting over the suede from the opening, which has not gone anywhere but has softened into a background warmth. Coriander adds a faint spiced brightness that keeps the heart from feeling one-dimensional. The rum note here is not boozy in isolation; it mingles with the cumin to produce something closer to warm spiced wood than an outright spirit. It can read genuinely arresting or too tame and commercially safe depending on how you feel about the raw original, and that split is worth knowing before you buy.

The dry-down is where it becomes most wearable and also most debated. Bourbon vanilla absolute floods in and turns everything warm and rich. It integrates the rum from the heart beautifully, giving a boozy, almost gourmand quality that is nothing like the austere mineral dryness of the original Fahrenheit. On skin the vanilla reads as genuine and full-bodied rather than synthetic. The leather and spice whisper underneath it as the fragrance settles, keeping the whole thing from going purely sweet. What you end up with is a warm, dark, leathery vanilla with a rum spine that leans much closer to oriental territory than any other entry in the Fahrenheit line. The transition from that dry anisic opening to this rich vanilla finish is the most surprising thing about wearing it: it can feel like a rewarding arc from cool restraint into deep warmth, or the tonal shift between the cool licorice-suede phase and the gourmand close can feel too abrupt, depending on skin and expectation.

When to Wear

Built for cold-weather occasions, this one belongs to autumn evenings and winter nights. The vanilla and rum make it too heavy for warm or humid conditions. Wear it to a dinner, a formal event, or after dark where a rich, enclosing scent feels appropriate rather than overwhelming.

Who Is It For

Best suited to someone who already loves warm oriental masculines with a leather edge, and wants something with more structural complexity than a straightforward vanilla or amber but less confrontation than the original Fahrenheit's raw character.

If you enjoy Dior Homme Intense, the leather-and-sweetness dynamic sits in a similar neighbourhood and makes for a compelling comparison. Browse the full Dior collection at Aromatica.

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

Fahrenheit Le Parfum | Aromatica