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The Noir 29

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The Noir 29

Black tea is the idea here, but the execution is stranger and better than that sounds. Le Labo built The Noir 29 Eau de Parfum in 2015 around a special extraction of black tea leaves, then surrounded it with fig, smoke, and dry woods so the whole thing reads less like a cup of tea and more like a quiet room where someone has been smoking. Aromatica carries The Noir 29 decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes, and it remains one of the more grown-up things in the Le Labo lineup.

Fragrance Notes

Top: Fig, Bay Leaf, Bergamot

Heart: Cedar, Vetiver, Musk

Base: Tobacco, Hay

The Scent

Bergamot and bay leaf open things with a green, slightly bitter lift over a fig that smells more like the leaf and stem than the fruit. The black tea concept shows up almost immediately underneath, dry and tannic, the way a strong brew sits after it has cooled. There is a faint herbal edge from the bay leaf in these opening minutes that keeps the bergamot from reading as a citrus cologne, and together those two notes hold the composition in a clean, almost medicinal register before the heart begins to shift. Within the first half hour the bay leaf settles and cedar starts to dominate, lending a pencil-shaving dryness that keeps the composition from ever turning sweet. Vetiver pushes in around the same time, rooty and a little smoky, and this is where the fragrance can read as quietly dark rather than fresh. The fig persists through this middle stretch as a green, milky-stemmed thread rather than a ripe fruit, which is part of why the whole thing stays so dry. The way the fig and cedar interlock is worth noting: neither overwhelms the other, and that tension is what keeps the middle stage from going flat or woody in a generic sense. The musk is soft and clean, smoothing the edges without adding any laundered brightness. As it moves into the dry-down, tobacco and hay take over, dusty and leafy, a finish that some find deeply satisfying and others find too austere. That tea-tobacco-hay accord is the heart of its character, a dry, leafy, smoke-adjacent finish that smells lived-in. Hours in, the cedar and vetiver are still legible beneath the hay, so the base never collapses into a single flat note. It wears close after the first hour, and that intimacy is part of its character rather than a flaw. Compared to fig-and-tea cousins it leans drier and more masculine-coded, less creamy, more about texture than comfort.

When to Wear

A cool-weather and shoulder-season scent, best from autumn through the damp end of winter when its dry tea and hay have air to breathe. Wear it to long workdays at a desk, gallery afternoons, or a low-lit dinner where you want presence without volume. It also sits naturally alongside the rest of the tobacco collection if that leafy, smoky character is what you are chasing.

Who Is It For

Someone who reaches for dry, earthy fragrances over sweet ones and likes the idea of smelling like a smoky tea room rather than a dessert will find this speaks directly to them. If you gravitate to vetiver, cedar, and unsweetened tobacco, this speaks your language.

If you enjoy Gris Charmel Extrait, it sits in the same fig-and-tea family and is the comparison many reach for, though it runs creamier and warmer than this one. Browse the full Le Labo collection at Aromatica.

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

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From $499.80

Original: $1,428.00

-65%
The Noir 29

$1,428.00

$499.80

Product Information

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Description

Black tea is the idea here, but the execution is stranger and better than that sounds. Le Labo built The Noir 29 Eau de Parfum in 2015 around a special extraction of black tea leaves, then surrounded it with fig, smoke, and dry woods so the whole thing reads less like a cup of tea and more like a quiet room where someone has been smoking. Aromatica carries The Noir 29 decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes, and it remains one of the more grown-up things in the Le Labo lineup.

Fragrance Notes

Top: Fig, Bay Leaf, Bergamot

Heart: Cedar, Vetiver, Musk

Base: Tobacco, Hay

The Scent

Bergamot and bay leaf open things with a green, slightly bitter lift over a fig that smells more like the leaf and stem than the fruit. The black tea concept shows up almost immediately underneath, dry and tannic, the way a strong brew sits after it has cooled. There is a faint herbal edge from the bay leaf in these opening minutes that keeps the bergamot from reading as a citrus cologne, and together those two notes hold the composition in a clean, almost medicinal register before the heart begins to shift. Within the first half hour the bay leaf settles and cedar starts to dominate, lending a pencil-shaving dryness that keeps the composition from ever turning sweet. Vetiver pushes in around the same time, rooty and a little smoky, and this is where the fragrance can read as quietly dark rather than fresh. The fig persists through this middle stretch as a green, milky-stemmed thread rather than a ripe fruit, which is part of why the whole thing stays so dry. The way the fig and cedar interlock is worth noting: neither overwhelms the other, and that tension is what keeps the middle stage from going flat or woody in a generic sense. The musk is soft and clean, smoothing the edges without adding any laundered brightness. As it moves into the dry-down, tobacco and hay take over, dusty and leafy, a finish that some find deeply satisfying and others find too austere. That tea-tobacco-hay accord is the heart of its character, a dry, leafy, smoke-adjacent finish that smells lived-in. Hours in, the cedar and vetiver are still legible beneath the hay, so the base never collapses into a single flat note. It wears close after the first hour, and that intimacy is part of its character rather than a flaw. Compared to fig-and-tea cousins it leans drier and more masculine-coded, less creamy, more about texture than comfort.

When to Wear

A cool-weather and shoulder-season scent, best from autumn through the damp end of winter when its dry tea and hay have air to breathe. Wear it to long workdays at a desk, gallery afternoons, or a low-lit dinner where you want presence without volume. It also sits naturally alongside the rest of the tobacco collection if that leafy, smoky character is what you are chasing.

Who Is It For

Someone who reaches for dry, earthy fragrances over sweet ones and likes the idea of smelling like a smoky tea room rather than a dessert will find this speaks directly to them. If you gravitate to vetiver, cedar, and unsweetened tobacco, this speaks your language.

If you enjoy Gris Charmel Extrait, it sits in the same fig-and-tea family and is the comparison many reach for, though it runs creamier and warmer than this one. Browse the full Le Labo collection at Aromatica.

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