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La Yuqawam Tobacco Blaze

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La Yuqawam Tobacco Blaze

Tobacco Blaze sits inside the La Yuqawam line the way a dark sequel sits next to a lighter original: same bones, sharper edges. Rasasi built this Eau de Parfum in 2013 as the smoky counterpart to the original La Yuqawam, trading its softer floral warmth for saffron, oud, and leather. Aromatica carries the La Yuqawam Tobacco Blaze decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes, so you can spend real time with a fragrance that reads more like a study in resin and hide than a typical mainstream oriental.

Fragrance Notes

Top: Saffron, Neroli, Lily-of-the-Valley

Heart: Apricot, Violet, Coumarin, Amber, Cedar

Base: Leather, Agarwood (Oud), Patchouli

The Scent

Saffron announces itself first, dry and slightly medicinal, with neroli cutting through it before the fragrance has a chance to feel heavy. Lily-of-the-valley adds a green, watery lift in these opening minutes, an odd but welcome contrast against the spice. Within twenty minutes the fruit shows up: apricot, soft and slightly jammy, rounding out the saffron's sharper corners. Violet follows close behind, giving the heart a powdery, almost cosmetic quality that some noses find unexpected next to leather and oud. That powderiness is real and worth naming directly rather than glossing over, because it splits opinion. Some skin chemistries push the violet and coumarin forward into something closer to soft suede and vanilla-tinged hay, while others let the amber and cedar dominate, turning the heart drier and woodier. Either way, the transition into the base is where the fragrance earns its name. Leather arrives first, not the harsh birch-tar kind but a supple, worked-hide texture, and agarwood follows close behind, resinous and dark without tipping into medicinal territory. Patchouli closes things out, earthy and slightly sweet, anchoring the leather and oud so the dry-down feels grounded rather than sharp. Coumarin lingers underneath all of this, a quiet almond-hay note that keeps the leather from turning too austere, and cedar reinforces the wood without adding sharpness. By the second hour the saffron has faded almost entirely, handing the stage to oud and leather working together, with patchouli filling in the low end. What began as a spiced floral opening ends as a warm, leathery, faintly sweet base that lingers close to the skin, dark enough to read as serious but never harsh.

When to Wear

This is a cold-weather fragrance built for evenings, the kind of scent that makes sense at a winter dinner or a late gathering where a leather jacket would also feel right. Save it for autumn and winter nights rather than daytime errands, since the saffron and oud read too concentrated for casual daylight wear. If you're building out a rotation for cooler months, the Rasasi collection has several similarly bold options worth exploring alongside it.

Who Is It For

Someone who reaches for leather jackets over blazers and prefers a fragrance with real weight behind it will feel at home here. It suits a wearer who likes spice and resin more than fruit or florals, even though both show up briefly in the heart.

If you enjoy La Yuqawam, the original from the same line, it shares the saffron opening but takes a softer, more floral path than Tobacco Blaze's leather-and-oud finish. For something equally dense and amber-driven, Hawas Elixir is worth comparing too. Browse the full Rasasi collection at Aromatica.

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

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From $162.05

Original: $463.00

-65%
La Yuqawam Tobacco Blaze

$463.00

$162.05

Product Information

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Description

Tobacco Blaze sits inside the La Yuqawam line the way a dark sequel sits next to a lighter original: same bones, sharper edges. Rasasi built this Eau de Parfum in 2013 as the smoky counterpart to the original La Yuqawam, trading its softer floral warmth for saffron, oud, and leather. Aromatica carries the La Yuqawam Tobacco Blaze decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes, so you can spend real time with a fragrance that reads more like a study in resin and hide than a typical mainstream oriental.

Fragrance Notes

Top: Saffron, Neroli, Lily-of-the-Valley

Heart: Apricot, Violet, Coumarin, Amber, Cedar

Base: Leather, Agarwood (Oud), Patchouli

The Scent

Saffron announces itself first, dry and slightly medicinal, with neroli cutting through it before the fragrance has a chance to feel heavy. Lily-of-the-valley adds a green, watery lift in these opening minutes, an odd but welcome contrast against the spice. Within twenty minutes the fruit shows up: apricot, soft and slightly jammy, rounding out the saffron's sharper corners. Violet follows close behind, giving the heart a powdery, almost cosmetic quality that some noses find unexpected next to leather and oud. That powderiness is real and worth naming directly rather than glossing over, because it splits opinion. Some skin chemistries push the violet and coumarin forward into something closer to soft suede and vanilla-tinged hay, while others let the amber and cedar dominate, turning the heart drier and woodier. Either way, the transition into the base is where the fragrance earns its name. Leather arrives first, not the harsh birch-tar kind but a supple, worked-hide texture, and agarwood follows close behind, resinous and dark without tipping into medicinal territory. Patchouli closes things out, earthy and slightly sweet, anchoring the leather and oud so the dry-down feels grounded rather than sharp. Coumarin lingers underneath all of this, a quiet almond-hay note that keeps the leather from turning too austere, and cedar reinforces the wood without adding sharpness. By the second hour the saffron has faded almost entirely, handing the stage to oud and leather working together, with patchouli filling in the low end. What began as a spiced floral opening ends as a warm, leathery, faintly sweet base that lingers close to the skin, dark enough to read as serious but never harsh.

When to Wear

This is a cold-weather fragrance built for evenings, the kind of scent that makes sense at a winter dinner or a late gathering where a leather jacket would also feel right. Save it for autumn and winter nights rather than daytime errands, since the saffron and oud read too concentrated for casual daylight wear. If you're building out a rotation for cooler months, the Rasasi collection has several similarly bold options worth exploring alongside it.

Who Is It For

Someone who reaches for leather jackets over blazers and prefers a fragrance with real weight behind it will feel at home here. It suits a wearer who likes spice and resin more than fruit or florals, even though both show up briefly in the heart.

If you enjoy La Yuqawam, the original from the same line, it shares the saffron opening but takes a softer, more floral path than Tobacco Blaze's leather-and-oud finish. For something equally dense and amber-driven, Hawas Elixir is worth comparing too. Browse the full Rasasi collection at Aromatica.

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

La Yuqawam Tobacco Blaze | Aromatica