ScentArt
Which Should You Buy?
Francois Demachy's polished Western reading of oud for La Collection Privee, with saffron, pink pepper and orange brightening a dry vetiver-and-oud spine. The 'oud for people who do not like oud' - and the entry point most Dior buyers actually own.
L'Oudh is a truly polarising beast, a 'love it or hate it' affair where petrol and rubber meet raw, earthy oud. It's a challenging wear that demands appreciation for its uncompromising, naturalistic approach to a dark, animalic aroma.
Scent Profile
How They Wear
Mood
Notes
Top Notes
Top Notes
Heart Notes
Base Notes
Accords
Performance
Season and Occasion Fit
Seasons
Fragrantica voters split 100% fall and 99.7% winter as the two strongest seasons - the dry vetiver-saffron-oud accord lands as a cold-weather composition. Spring works on shoulder-weather days; summer is the weakest fit because the woody-amber depth feels heavy in heat.
Occasions
The polished, low-animalic profile makes this one of the few opening-line Maison Privees genuinely office-safe (Fragrantica pros include 'safe for work environments' and 'sophisticated polished and professional character'). Strongest fit is evening date and formal dinners; casual lean is moderate; gym wear is a non-starter.
Seasons
A cold-weather scent - best worn in winter and autumn.
Occasions
Given its strong projection and often challenging opening notes of gasoline and rubber, L'Oudh is entirely unsuitable for office wear and too bold for most casual settings. Its dark, opulent character makes it more fitting for formal evenings or a daring date, but it's certainly not a crowd-pleaser.
Similarity Breakdown
How alike these two fragrances smell, scored from their full scent profiles.
Both lean oud, warm spicy, leather
Subtle differences in overall composition
Where to buy
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