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Oud Noir

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Oud Noir

Released in 2013, Versace Pour Homme Oud Noir is a quiet surprise from the Medusa label. An Eau de Parfum built around oud, spice, and incense, pitched squarely at men who want something darker and more complex than the main Versace Pour Homme line. Aromatica carries the Versace Oud Noir decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes, which makes it easy to spend real time with the fragrance and decide whether it suits you. The house is not known for restraint, yet this release pulls back in a way that rewards attention.

Fragrance Notes

Top: Black Pepper, Bitter Orange, Neroli

Heart: Saffron, Cardamom, Olibanum

Base: Agarwood (Oud), Patchouli, Leatherwood

The Scent

Brighter than the name suggests, the first thing the nose registers is a burst of bitter orange and neroli alongside a dry, crackling black pepper, and the effect is almost citrusy and fresh for the first few minutes. There is a clean smokiness underneath from the start, like a fire that has caught rather than one burning at full intensity. The pepper is not sharp in an aggressive way; it reads dry and dusty, reinforcing the smoke rather than competing with the citrus. As those top notes breathe and settle, they leave behind a faintly golden warmth that signals what is coming next.

Gradually, the spices start pulling the fragrance inward. Saffron arrives first, dry and slightly metallic, adding a warm golden quality that darkens the opening brightness without erasing it. The transition is unhurried: the citrus does not cut off abruptly but softens and recedes, letting the saffron occupy the space it vacated. Cardamom follows close behind, lending a slightly cool, herbal sweetness that keeps the middle from becoming too heavy. Olibanum, the frankincense note, is the highest-quality element in this composition. It brings a resinous, cathedral-like depth that gives Oud Noir a ceremonial feel that sits above its designer price point. The frankincense interacts with the saffron in a way that is dry rather than sweet, keeping the heart austere and composed rather than warm and enveloping. Where saffron pulls toward richness, the olibanum pulls toward cool, sacred austerity, and the two hold each other in balance through the entire heart phase.

By the time the base settles in, the oud is present but measured. This is not the raw, barnyard oud of niche Arabian perfumery. It is a refined, polished agarwood that sits cleanly over patchouli and leatherwood, creating a warm, dry, slightly smoky foundation. The leatherwood note is subtle but grounding, adding enough texture that the base feels tangible rather than abstract. The patchouli here is not the sweet, hippie-era patchouli of older orientals; it is clean and dark, doing quiet structural work underneath the oud without announcing itself. The transition from the spiced heart to the woody base is smooth rather than dramatic, and the frankincense threads through both phases without disappearing, which is what keeps the composition feeling coherent rather than like separate chapters.

The oud here can read as too polished and too safe for those accustomed to raw natural oud, or as an approachable, well-constructed entry point into darker oriental territory depending on skin and experience. Both reads are fair. One frequently noted comparison is to Versace Man from 2003, which the oud composition reportedly shares significant DNA with, making this feel like a premium continuation of that discontinued fragrance. The overall character is smoky, spiced, and resinous without crossing into heavy or oppressive territory.

When to Wear

This is an autumn and winter fragrance, best suited to cooler evenings out, formal dinners, or occasions where quiet authority matters more than loud presence. It suits a date night in a dim restaurant, or a dressed-up social occasion where the crowd is small and the lighting is low.

Who Is It For

Made for the man who gravitates toward dark, spiced orientals but wants something polished enough to wear to a dinner rather than something raw and challenging. It suits someone curious about oud who finds full niche oud compositions too extreme, as well as the seasoned wearer who appreciates a designer take that does not dilute the genre into something unrecognisable.

If you enjoy Aoud Night by Montale, it occupies the same dark, spiced oud family and rewards a direct comparison. Browse the full Versace collection at Aromatica.

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

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From $164.50

Original: $470.00

-65%
Oud Noir

$470.00

$164.50

Product Information

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Description

Released in 2013, Versace Pour Homme Oud Noir is a quiet surprise from the Medusa label. An Eau de Parfum built around oud, spice, and incense, pitched squarely at men who want something darker and more complex than the main Versace Pour Homme line. Aromatica carries the Versace Oud Noir decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes, which makes it easy to spend real time with the fragrance and decide whether it suits you. The house is not known for restraint, yet this release pulls back in a way that rewards attention.

Fragrance Notes

Top: Black Pepper, Bitter Orange, Neroli

Heart: Saffron, Cardamom, Olibanum

Base: Agarwood (Oud), Patchouli, Leatherwood

The Scent

Brighter than the name suggests, the first thing the nose registers is a burst of bitter orange and neroli alongside a dry, crackling black pepper, and the effect is almost citrusy and fresh for the first few minutes. There is a clean smokiness underneath from the start, like a fire that has caught rather than one burning at full intensity. The pepper is not sharp in an aggressive way; it reads dry and dusty, reinforcing the smoke rather than competing with the citrus. As those top notes breathe and settle, they leave behind a faintly golden warmth that signals what is coming next.

Gradually, the spices start pulling the fragrance inward. Saffron arrives first, dry and slightly metallic, adding a warm golden quality that darkens the opening brightness without erasing it. The transition is unhurried: the citrus does not cut off abruptly but softens and recedes, letting the saffron occupy the space it vacated. Cardamom follows close behind, lending a slightly cool, herbal sweetness that keeps the middle from becoming too heavy. Olibanum, the frankincense note, is the highest-quality element in this composition. It brings a resinous, cathedral-like depth that gives Oud Noir a ceremonial feel that sits above its designer price point. The frankincense interacts with the saffron in a way that is dry rather than sweet, keeping the heart austere and composed rather than warm and enveloping. Where saffron pulls toward richness, the olibanum pulls toward cool, sacred austerity, and the two hold each other in balance through the entire heart phase.

By the time the base settles in, the oud is present but measured. This is not the raw, barnyard oud of niche Arabian perfumery. It is a refined, polished agarwood that sits cleanly over patchouli and leatherwood, creating a warm, dry, slightly smoky foundation. The leatherwood note is subtle but grounding, adding enough texture that the base feels tangible rather than abstract. The patchouli here is not the sweet, hippie-era patchouli of older orientals; it is clean and dark, doing quiet structural work underneath the oud without announcing itself. The transition from the spiced heart to the woody base is smooth rather than dramatic, and the frankincense threads through both phases without disappearing, which is what keeps the composition feeling coherent rather than like separate chapters.

The oud here can read as too polished and too safe for those accustomed to raw natural oud, or as an approachable, well-constructed entry point into darker oriental territory depending on skin and experience. Both reads are fair. One frequently noted comparison is to Versace Man from 2003, which the oud composition reportedly shares significant DNA with, making this feel like a premium continuation of that discontinued fragrance. The overall character is smoky, spiced, and resinous without crossing into heavy or oppressive territory.

When to Wear

This is an autumn and winter fragrance, best suited to cooler evenings out, formal dinners, or occasions where quiet authority matters more than loud presence. It suits a date night in a dim restaurant, or a dressed-up social occasion where the crowd is small and the lighting is low.

Who Is It For

Made for the man who gravitates toward dark, spiced orientals but wants something polished enough to wear to a dinner rather than something raw and challenging. It suits someone curious about oud who finds full niche oud compositions too extreme, as well as the seasoned wearer who appreciates a designer take that does not dilute the genre into something unrecognisable.

If you enjoy Aoud Night by Montale, it occupies the same dark, spiced oud family and rewards a direct comparison. Browse the full Versace collection at Aromatica.

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

Oud Noir | Aromatica