
Grand Soir
Francis Kurkdjian built his house on restraint, but Grand Soir is the one time he let the amber run loose. Released in 2016 as an eau de parfum, it takes the labdanum accord from his earlier work and pushes it toward something warmer and more resinous, closer to a candlelit room than a spritz of cologne. Aromatica carries the Maison Francis Kurkdjian Grand Soir decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes, and it remains one of the house's most requested ambers for a reason: it smells expensive without trying to prove it.
Fragrance Notes
Top: Spanish Labdanum, Orange
Heart: Lavender, Siam Benzoin
Base: Amber, Vanilla, Tonka Bean, Musk, Cedar
The Scent
The first thing the nose registers is labdanum, thick and honeyed, with a citrus flick of orange that keeps it from feeling heavy right out of the gate. That orange burns off fast, maybe ten minutes in, and what is left underneath starts to show its shape: a resinous, slightly leathery amber that never quite smells sweet in the candy sense. Lavender arrives next, but it is not the sharp herbal lavender of a barbershop fougere. Here it is soft and folded into the labdanum, more texture than note, smoothing the transition into the benzoin. Siam benzoin is where things get interesting. It reads warm and balsamic, almost like vanilla-dipped wood, and it bridges the gap between the top and the base so smoothly that most wearers cannot pinpoint where the heart ends. By the one-hour mark, the composition has settled into its real identity: amber and tonka bean locked together, with vanilla adding a custardy roundness and musk smoothing the edges into skin. Cedar shows up late and stays quiet, giving the drydown a dry, woody backbone so the amber does not collapse into pure sweetness. The surprise here is how dry Grand Soir manages to stay despite its reputation as a big amber. There is a split reaction on skin chemistry: some people get a soft, powdery finish from the benzoin and musk, while others find the labdanum stays resinous and slightly smoky for the full wear. Both readings are correct, and both are worth knowing before you commit. What stays constant is the sense of density. This is not a fragrance that whispers.
When to Wear
Grand Soir belongs to cold weather, dinner tables, and rooms lit by candles rather than overhead bulbs. Reach for it on a winter evening out, a holiday gathering, or a formal dinner where the air has a chill in it. It reads best after dark, once the temperature has dropped and a heavier fragrance stops feeling like too much.
Who Is It For
Someone who already owns a few ambers and wants one that leans dry and resinous instead of sugary will get along with this immediately. It also suits a wearer who prefers a fragrance with weight to it over something light and forgettable.
If you enjoy Baccarat Rouge 540, Grand Soir sits in a related warm-amber register with more resin and less saffron sweetness, and it is worth comparing side by side. For something darker and woodier from the same house, Oud Satin Mood is worth a look too. Browse the full Maison Francis Kurkdjian collection at Aromatica.
Available as an authentic decant in Bangladesh at Aromatica in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml.
Original: $1,450.00
-65%$1,450.00
$507.50Product Information
Product Information
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Shipping & Returns
Description
Francis Kurkdjian built his house on restraint, but Grand Soir is the one time he let the amber run loose. Released in 2016 as an eau de parfum, it takes the labdanum accord from his earlier work and pushes it toward something warmer and more resinous, closer to a candlelit room than a spritz of cologne. Aromatica carries the Maison Francis Kurkdjian Grand Soir decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes, and it remains one of the house's most requested ambers for a reason: it smells expensive without trying to prove it.
Fragrance Notes
Top: Spanish Labdanum, Orange
Heart: Lavender, Siam Benzoin
Base: Amber, Vanilla, Tonka Bean, Musk, Cedar
The Scent
The first thing the nose registers is labdanum, thick and honeyed, with a citrus flick of orange that keeps it from feeling heavy right out of the gate. That orange burns off fast, maybe ten minutes in, and what is left underneath starts to show its shape: a resinous, slightly leathery amber that never quite smells sweet in the candy sense. Lavender arrives next, but it is not the sharp herbal lavender of a barbershop fougere. Here it is soft and folded into the labdanum, more texture than note, smoothing the transition into the benzoin. Siam benzoin is where things get interesting. It reads warm and balsamic, almost like vanilla-dipped wood, and it bridges the gap between the top and the base so smoothly that most wearers cannot pinpoint where the heart ends. By the one-hour mark, the composition has settled into its real identity: amber and tonka bean locked together, with vanilla adding a custardy roundness and musk smoothing the edges into skin. Cedar shows up late and stays quiet, giving the drydown a dry, woody backbone so the amber does not collapse into pure sweetness. The surprise here is how dry Grand Soir manages to stay despite its reputation as a big amber. There is a split reaction on skin chemistry: some people get a soft, powdery finish from the benzoin and musk, while others find the labdanum stays resinous and slightly smoky for the full wear. Both readings are correct, and both are worth knowing before you commit. What stays constant is the sense of density. This is not a fragrance that whispers.
When to Wear
Grand Soir belongs to cold weather, dinner tables, and rooms lit by candles rather than overhead bulbs. Reach for it on a winter evening out, a holiday gathering, or a formal dinner where the air has a chill in it. It reads best after dark, once the temperature has dropped and a heavier fragrance stops feeling like too much.
Who Is It For
Someone who already owns a few ambers and wants one that leans dry and resinous instead of sugary will get along with this immediately. It also suits a wearer who prefers a fragrance with weight to it over something light and forgettable.
If you enjoy Baccarat Rouge 540, Grand Soir sits in a related warm-amber register with more resin and less saffron sweetness, and it is worth comparing side by side. For something darker and woodier from the same house, Oud Satin Mood is worth a look too. Browse the full Maison Francis Kurkdjian collection at Aromatica.
Available as an authentic decant in Bangladesh at Aromatica in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml.











