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Haltane

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Haltane

Released in 2021 and launched exclusively through Harrods before reaching wider shelves, Haltane Eau de Parfum from Parfums de Marly sits comfortably in that house's lineage of rich, unapologetically extravagant masculines. It is a woody aromatic composition that opens with something almost classical before pivoting into darker, spicier territory. Aromatica carries the Parfums de Marly Haltane decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes.

Fragrance Notes

Top: Lavender, Bergamot, Clary Sage

Heart: Praline, Saffron

Base: Agarwood (Oud), Cedar

The Scent

Bergamot arrives first, delivering citrus brightness in the earliest minutes, and the lavender follows with an herbal coolness rather than anything barbershop. Clary sage adds a faintly bitter, almost wine-like edge underneath, keeping the opening from feeling generic. It reads as fresh but not light. There is weight behind it from the first spray, a density that signals something more complex is waiting underneath. The opening trio is classical in structure, but the sage keeps it from sitting still, nudging it toward something slightly aromatic and grown. As the top notes breathe, the bergamot loses its sharp citrus edge and takes on a softer, rounder quality, while the lavender and sage begin to blur together into a cool herbal accord. That slow merging is what makes the transition into the heart feel earned rather than abrupt. Then the shift happens, and it is the heart that makes Haltane divisive in the best possible way. Saffron moves in with real authority, carrying that metallic-sweet warmth it is known for, and it is unmistakably the loudest ingredient in this stage. It can read dominant to the point of overwhelming or exactly what the fragrance needed to shift from pleasant aromatic into something genuinely compelling, depending on skin chemistry and personal tolerance for spice. That split impression is worth knowing going in. Praline layers underneath the saffron, adding a sugared, almost honeyed sweetness that stops the spice from going harsh. It is not a gourmand praline. It reads more like a smooth, dark confection rather than a dessert bowl, a background richness that props up the saffron without competing with it. The two notes together produce a warm, spiced sweetness that is unusual for a fragrance rooted in lavender and bergamot, and that contrast is what makes the middle stage so interesting. The saffron and praline continue to shift as the skin warms them, the sweetness rounding out and the metallic edge of the saffron becoming more golden than sharp. As the dry-down progresses, the oud and cedar base anchor everything. The oud here is not smoky or animalic in the way Middle Eastern ouds often read. It is more refined, slightly resinous, almost furniture-polish smooth, and it melds cleanly with the cedar to produce a woody warmth that feels distinctly Western niche rather than Arabic attars. The cedar brings its own dry, pencil-shaving quality that adds structure and stops the base from going soft. The saffron softens considerably in the base phase, leaving a golden amber quality that works beautifully against the wood. The praline sweetness fades into a faint background warmth rather than disappearing entirely, which keeps the dry-down from feeling stark. What you are left with after the opening freshness has fully shed is a complex, dark, spiced woody fragrance that has settled into something confident and unhurried. It is the kind of base that rewards patience.

When to Wear

Haltane is an autumn and winter fragrance, best worn in cool weather when the saffron and oud have room to bloom without the heat making them heavy. It works well for evening occasions, formal dinners, nights out, or settings where a fragrance is meant to announce itself and linger, from a date to a cultural event to a well-dressed weeknight.

Who Is It For

Built for the person who already owns a clean aromatic or two and wants to explore something darker and more adventurous, someone drawn to spiced oud compositions but who prefers their oud polished and refined rather than raw and smoky.

If you enjoy Carlisle, which shares that cool aromatic-into-warm-wood structure, Haltane is the spicier, more saffron-driven option worth comparing directly. You can also explore Oajan, another oud-forward offering from the same house. Browse the full Parfums de Marly collection at Aromatica.

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

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From $326.90

Original: $934.00

-65%
Haltane

$934.00

$326.90

Product Information

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Description

Released in 2021 and launched exclusively through Harrods before reaching wider shelves, Haltane Eau de Parfum from Parfums de Marly sits comfortably in that house's lineage of rich, unapologetically extravagant masculines. It is a woody aromatic composition that opens with something almost classical before pivoting into darker, spicier territory. Aromatica carries the Parfums de Marly Haltane decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes.

Fragrance Notes

Top: Lavender, Bergamot, Clary Sage

Heart: Praline, Saffron

Base: Agarwood (Oud), Cedar

The Scent

Bergamot arrives first, delivering citrus brightness in the earliest minutes, and the lavender follows with an herbal coolness rather than anything barbershop. Clary sage adds a faintly bitter, almost wine-like edge underneath, keeping the opening from feeling generic. It reads as fresh but not light. There is weight behind it from the first spray, a density that signals something more complex is waiting underneath. The opening trio is classical in structure, but the sage keeps it from sitting still, nudging it toward something slightly aromatic and grown. As the top notes breathe, the bergamot loses its sharp citrus edge and takes on a softer, rounder quality, while the lavender and sage begin to blur together into a cool herbal accord. That slow merging is what makes the transition into the heart feel earned rather than abrupt. Then the shift happens, and it is the heart that makes Haltane divisive in the best possible way. Saffron moves in with real authority, carrying that metallic-sweet warmth it is known for, and it is unmistakably the loudest ingredient in this stage. It can read dominant to the point of overwhelming or exactly what the fragrance needed to shift from pleasant aromatic into something genuinely compelling, depending on skin chemistry and personal tolerance for spice. That split impression is worth knowing going in. Praline layers underneath the saffron, adding a sugared, almost honeyed sweetness that stops the spice from going harsh. It is not a gourmand praline. It reads more like a smooth, dark confection rather than a dessert bowl, a background richness that props up the saffron without competing with it. The two notes together produce a warm, spiced sweetness that is unusual for a fragrance rooted in lavender and bergamot, and that contrast is what makes the middle stage so interesting. The saffron and praline continue to shift as the skin warms them, the sweetness rounding out and the metallic edge of the saffron becoming more golden than sharp. As the dry-down progresses, the oud and cedar base anchor everything. The oud here is not smoky or animalic in the way Middle Eastern ouds often read. It is more refined, slightly resinous, almost furniture-polish smooth, and it melds cleanly with the cedar to produce a woody warmth that feels distinctly Western niche rather than Arabic attars. The cedar brings its own dry, pencil-shaving quality that adds structure and stops the base from going soft. The saffron softens considerably in the base phase, leaving a golden amber quality that works beautifully against the wood. The praline sweetness fades into a faint background warmth rather than disappearing entirely, which keeps the dry-down from feeling stark. What you are left with after the opening freshness has fully shed is a complex, dark, spiced woody fragrance that has settled into something confident and unhurried. It is the kind of base that rewards patience.

When to Wear

Haltane is an autumn and winter fragrance, best worn in cool weather when the saffron and oud have room to bloom without the heat making them heavy. It works well for evening occasions, formal dinners, nights out, or settings where a fragrance is meant to announce itself and linger, from a date to a cultural event to a well-dressed weeknight.

Who Is It For

Built for the person who already owns a clean aromatic or two and wants to explore something darker and more adventurous, someone drawn to spiced oud compositions but who prefers their oud polished and refined rather than raw and smoky.

If you enjoy Carlisle, which shares that cool aromatic-into-warm-wood structure, Haltane is the spicier, more saffron-driven option worth comparing directly. You can also explore Oajan, another oud-forward offering from the same house. Browse the full Parfums de Marly collection at Aromatica.

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

Haltane | Aromatica