Men

Amber Oud Tobacco Edition

4.23 de 5
3,029 votos

Acordes principales

Descripción

Amber Oud Tobacco Edition by Al Haramain Perfumes is a spiced oriental fragrance for men and women. Launched in 2019, this composition features tobacco leaves, cinnamon, black pepper, and ginger in its top notes. The heart reveals vanilla, cloves, star anise, tonka bean, cocoa, and frankincense, while the base settles on tobacco, dried fruits, and woody notes.

Resumen rápido

Cuándo llevarla (votos)

  • Invierno 45%
  • Primavera 12%
  • Verano 3.8%
  • Otoño 40%
  • Día 34%
  • Noche 66%

Notas clave

Comunidad

3,029 votos

  • Positivo 82%
  • Negativo 9.5%
  • Neutral 8.5%

Pirámide olfativa

Estructura completa de la fragancia: de la salida al fondo.

Comunidad

Qué dicen los usuarios sobre propiedad, preferencia y mejor momento de uso.

Propiedad

¿La tienen, la tuvieron o la quieren?

Uso recomendado

Estación y momento del día con más votos.

Dónde comprar

Compara tiendas verificadas para Amber Oud Tobacco Edition y elige según envío, precio o disponibilidad.

Amazon

Amazon

Envío rápido

Entrega rápida y política de devoluciones conocida.

Ideal si priorizas velocidad y disponibilidad.

Ver en Amazon
eBay

eBay

Más opciones

Más opciones de precio, formatos y vendedores.

Útil para comparar alternativas antes de decidir.

Ver en eBay

Características

Resumen de votos sobre longevidad, estela, género y percepción de precio.

Longevidad

Escasa

Débil

Moderada

Duradera

Muy duradera

Estela

Suave

Moderada

Pesada

Enorme

Género

Femenino

Unisex femenino

Unisex

Unisex masculino

Masculino

Precio

Extremadamente costoso

Ligeramente costoso

Precio moderado

Buen precio

Excelente precio

Reseñas

Experiencias reales de la comunidad sobre uso diario, rendimiento y estela.

Para dejar una reseña necesitas iniciar sesión.

40 reseñas

Mostrando las más recientes primero.

  • Bruno K, if you live in Spain: go to the Corte Inglés to test Tom Ford’s Tobacco Oud. I know it’s very expensive, but if you like it and want something similar and very economical, get the DIVAIN equivalent; it goes quite well.

  • Although tobacco isn’t the protagonist, cocoa takes its place… I love the sweetness of this; it’s creamy yet bitter, bright, with a dark touch. For me, it’s in an age range between 22 and 50 years; you’ll make an impression with it, and besides, its longevity is eternal; the longer, the better. 9.5/10.

  • @Gonzalo46 I’m not an expert and I’ve been through a year of perfume madness. I join what you say: when I went to a shop to have perfumes applied, at one point I told them I wanted something full of tobacco, that it was noticeable. And they said: – Al Haramain Tobacco AOC. Okay, I said; they applied it to my arm and I didn’t feel the sensation of smoke, something burnt, or the leaf when it’s stored in a box before being burned. I perceived only sweetness and said: – well, I don’t smell much tobacco, just something sweet. And another person told me: – it’s that it’s a sweet tobacco. My face (•_•)- … well, no. I want something where tobacco is more present; here I don’t perceive much tobacco. I’ll take the opportunity; if anyone can recommend one where you can feel the tobacco, please, so I don’t have to try them one by one.

  • A fragrance that is very liked in my workplace (to clarify, all my colleagues are women); everyone except me, unfortunately, too sweet for my taste, nauseating. The name is a bit misleading for those who like the tobacco note (lately it happens a lot, like with Montale’s Oud Tobacco). The note, to be present in the opening and dry-down, has very little presence for my taste; it’s true that it’s in the opening alongside star anise and clove which accompany it, but it begins to disappear very quickly, fusing with those which, in contrast, are present throughout the life of the scent, and are no more nor less than the aforementioned nuts, which in this case give the sensation of having crushed and macerated prunes and dried figs in syrup with a bit of Nesquik, which ends up generating that olfactory sensation of chocolate honey that is spoken of. Add tonka bean and go buy insulin at the pharmacy. Nobody in my circle of acquaintances has been able to perceive the incense, but everyone smells the nuts. Longevity and trail are excellent. I understand that if you like sweet things, you’ll like it. There’s a comment saying the opening reminds it of the aroma of black tobacco (Parisiennes/Gitanes cigarettes), hmm, I totally disagree; I wish it were so!!!! P.S.: another blind purchase that ends in disappointment, and already there are… (better not to count).

  • @bruno K tests Mancera’s Red Tobacco; there you will notice it, it’s exactly what you were looking for.

  • ShiseidoTactics

    I have a sample of Tom Ford’s Tobacco Vanille and say it doesn’t resemble it at all, but it definitely fits the style. The tobacco (which is there, mind you) takes a back seat to a cocoa that has left me astounded. Let me explain: in other fragrances with cocoa, they’re closer to chocolate (cocoa + milk + sugar); here they aren’t; here the cocoa is closer to the raw bean, though already sun-dried. How do I know? Because I have two cocoa plants in my garden and I process the beans myself to make homemade chocolate. Congratulations to this house for not limiting themselves to making a clone; they simply adopted their own style. As it dries down, a delicious Dior Homme Intense emerges. What do we ask of a good fragrance? That it evolves, not that it be linear, right? This one evolves, and beautifully. It will be my next purchase, no doubts. It will be at my house in less than 15 days (believe me: the shop is 200 metres away, but my finances are across the seas, so I must wait to pay off some debts, hehe).

  • Marco_Solar

    I’m not sure if I was sold something else or what, but here’s my take. It smells of anise, cloves, and a bit of vanilla, which makes it more bearable; I say this because it smells very much like syrup or those old anise sweets. It doesn’t smell of tobacco or cocoa as others claim. Projection is good for 1-2 hours, trail is decent until the third hour, and longevity on the skin is over 12 hours (that great longevity makes me think it’s the original, but all I smell is anise and cloves). It suits almost anything in cool climates, with non-sportswear. Good price for what it offers.

  • gosxicotet

    I have one on each wrist alongside Tom Ford’s Tobacco Vanille, and I can’t tell them apart. For me, the vanilla becomes far too obvious. Vanilla to the max.

  • ShiseidoTactics

    Agree with most: the tobacco note is very subtle, and a medicinal touch predominates, yet that sweet and spicy blend is so sticky you can’t remain indifferent. Meursault from Camus would be perfect for it, because you either love it or hate it; indifference isn’t an option. It’s not a clone of Tom Ford’s Tobacco Vanille because it lacks that lush tobacco; this Arabian gem merely captures one facet of that fragrance. I like it very much; it’s more discreet than Ted Lapidus’s Black Soul Imperial. Its greatest asset is the value for money. If it doesn’t suffer the popularity hit of Club de Nuit Intense, it will have a special place in my collection. One of my best recent purchases.

  • Felixnega

    I’m a beginner with perfumes but this reminds me a lot of a honey and lemon tea my mum makes for me, it smells exactly the same.

  • The first time I’ve thrown a cologne in the bin! Impossible to bear this smell. Nothing like Tom Ford Tobacco Vanille, it smells like cheap old-fashioned cologne. The trail is unbearable. Anyway, money thrown in the bin.

  • Jose Luis Tov

    Brother Rodmilin, don’t let yourself be carried away by the first impression. With these scents, you must play with the number of sprays and the season. Tobacco almost always goes with vanilla and cinnamon, and sometimes gives the appearance of a lady’s perfume. I’ve tried several of this type; if you say the trail is unbearable, apply less. I assure you that if worn properly, you’ll enjoy the dry-downs. They are charming and I wish they projected more. Greetings and good vibes.

  • Lr1N2K3Gu4

    I love it! It has become my winter signature. The tobacco isn’t too strong, but the cinnamon, clove, incense, and a hint of honey make something magical. It’s addictive. With cold weather it’s MARVELLOUS. I hate sweet perfumes, but this has an elegant and discreet touch of sweetness.

  • jose_rafael98

    I own its cousin, Amber Oud Gold Edition, which is excellent, but this Tobacco Edition smells very synthetic to me. It has great longevity and beastly projection, but the scent leaves much to be desired, typical of Arabic perfumes: lots of trail and fixation, but synthetic aromas.

  • Strong, gourmet, and potent. Upon spraying, it’s a powder bomb where quality notes battle: tobacco leaf, cinnamon, cacao, and vanilla with touches of black pepper and cardamom. As it dries, the creamy vanillas and tonka beans wrapped in tobacco flower make it woody and spiced. It’s elegant, nocturnal, for autumn and winter, with a suit and tie. Although unisex, it’s very masculine. It lasts over 12 hours and projects for 6. Don’t overuse it indoors because it’s ultra-invasive and impossible to go unnoticed. It’s a compliment factory for the female public.

  • What do they say about it smelling synthetic? Do they think the commercials are natural or of extremely high quality? I’m amazed by what I read. Not liking it is valid, but inventing things, haha. Objectively, it smells of cinnamon, vanilla, and tobacco, close to Tom Ford but not quite. People tell me it smells of chocolate, formal, elegant, or like a winter night. It doesn’t usually get compliments but it turns heads. It lasts all day and is strong. It’s cosy, ideal for cold nights; in the heat it suffocates me but I tolerate it at night.

  • A little gem that surprised me; it smells 90% like TF Tobacco but sweeter, just like the Haramain. It lasts 10 hours on my skin; if it lands on clothes, use a good fabric softener to remove it. The tobacco is less aggressive but lingers, while at 4 hours the cinnamon hits hard, followed by anise creating an exquisite blend. For the price, I prefer this over TF. It projects for 2 hours then becomes intimate with a trail. I’d give it a 9, greetings 👋

  • A good alternative to TV. At first, it smells of anise and clove, none of the chocolate and tobacco mentioned, but after a week it feels sweet and rich. Curiously: when mixed with Armaf Odyssey White Edition, it smells 99.99% like Stronger With You Intensely, a wonder 🤩

  • Applied on skin with two sprays. I am a lover of sweet fragrances and this doesn’t convince me for all the hype it handles. I notice a lot of anise alongside something herbal and a honeyed vanilla, like when you take a spoonful of the honey jar your neighbour gave you and eat it directly. I think it’s one of those fragrances that are better appreciated in the air than smelling directly from the skin. Nevertheless, unwarranted hype, because although it smells good, it doesn’t feel so masculine or something worth paying the price of a Tobacco Vanille or this Amber Oud Tobacco. The dry down after 3-4 hours, with the anise note dropping, already becomes a delightful aroma to me. It reminds me of fragrances like Bentley for Men. I’ll keep trying it to see how it evolves. I like it but I expected more.

  • The other day I tried Amber Oud TE again to compare it with Tom Ford’s Tobacco Vanille. I wore it to an informal meeting expecting that warm tobacco explosion that is mentioned so often. However, from the first hour I realised I wasn’t getting what I expected. The sweet notes of vanilla and cocoa are there, yes, but the tobacco, that element that gives body and character to Tom Ford’s fragrance, is completely absent. It’s as if they wanted to be inspired by Tobacco Vanille but stopped halfway. The curious thing is that, with the price increase and how difficult it is to find, it falls behind other alternatives. By the end of the meeting I was clear that, although pleasant, it’s not the clone many claim it to be.

  • Just opening the bottle reveals a strong, sweet and sophisticated aroma; it’s very potent in terms of longevity and projection. It doesn’t declare the note, but I can perceive a honey accord that makes it sweeter than Tom Ford Tobacco Vanille. As for its similarity to the latter, I’d put it between 80% and 85%. It’s one of my favourite perfumes and a great purchase if you’re looking for something sweet and refined and are short on budget or simply don’t want to spend on a Tobacco Vanille.

  • Hello, I’ve been using AMBER OUD TOBACCO EDITION by Al Haramain for a few days. I spray myself three times every morning and the trail left on my skin isn’t what I read, that it was very long-lasting, so they advised against overusing it. By midday it’s practically imperceptible, barely noticeable is a trail of vanilla which is the predominant note. I am a user of A Men Pure Tonka and A Men Pure Havanne by Mugler (a great mistake for this brand to discontinue them as they were incredible perfumes). Those two did last as much on my skin and clothes. I’m left a bit ‘chof’ (disappointed) with the expectations of the Amber Oud Tobacco Edition due to its poor longevity. No one from my circle has told me how well I smell either.

  • I have to say that this fragrance, in my opinion which is totally subjective, doesn’t quite convince me. I like sweet fragrances, but I notice this one is too potent and dark a sweet; it just doesn’t quite appeal to me… honestly, I don’t like the first two hours. What I do have to say is that it leaves a very pleasant scent after 3-4 hours, where the scent lingers more on the skin. In summary, it’s not for me.

  • I have to put two sprays on my neck because otherwise it overwhelms me due to its strength. The aroma is a chocolatey, spiced, dark vanilla; people have told me from metres away that I smell like chocolate, so it projects a lot. More than one compliment, even from people who don’t usually notice perfumes, because it’s a striking scent. Compared to its inspiration at Sephora, Tobacco Vanille seemed to me more like a creamy vanilla without the chocolate or cocoa of this one; the tobacco is more noticeable, making it more unisex and that’s why I like this Amber Oud Tobacco Edition more. I only wear it in the cold and at night because it’s so spiced that I don’t fancy it in the heat. Oh, and the presentation of this collection is one of the best in Arabic fragrances, as a bonus extra.

  • Dassbartender

    A delightful aroma; one of the blind buys I’ve made. It was lovely dry down, but on the skin, despite its good performance, it gives me a medicinal touch that really bothers me. My mother wore it and what a difference it makes on her skin, bringing out the noblest aromas of this perfume. Recommended 100% but try before you buy.

  • I bought it blind and perhaps I’m not giving it the chance it deserves, but I’m already arranging a return. I love sweet and unisex perfumes, but this… it just smells of cloying honey from the first spray. I know I won’t use it and I don’t want something at home that I know I’ll never wear. On the other hand, the bottle and presentation are 10/10. The expectations, having heard of Tobacco Vanille by Tom Ford, have been let down too much by this Tobacco Edition.

  • Alexrojas2908

    A super potent perfume; I’m not sure if anything is stronger, but if there is, I don’t want to try it, haha. It’s good, although I feel it doesn’t resemble Tom Ford’s much. The longevity and projection are incredible; it smells of honey and tobacco. I perceive it as unisex. If you mix it with Sky Mandarin, you create a compliment bomb, literally smelling like a sweet dessert by the fireplace, sounds very rich, haha. But there it is, I recommend buying it, though it’s far from Tobacco Vanille.

  • MariusStripus

    Picked this up on offer from Miravia and it smells absolutely fantastic. It’s very close to Tobacco Vanille, projects well and lasts a long time. I get a unisex vibe from it, though it’s not the usual scent for women. It’s elegant and characterful, perfect for winter.

  • Lucianolococo

    I always try to be concrete and simple for those looking to read quickly without poetry. Fragrance mmm, it’s good, somewhat strange, a bit medicinal, as if you mixed anise star, thyme, and oregano (I’m not saying it smells like that, it’s just a simple way to describe it). Does it last? Yes, quite well for about 6 hours, no worries, and on clothes until the next day. Compliments? Mmm, I doubt it. I recommend it mmm, yes, but only if you know you’re not going for a simple, classic profile.

  • Personally, it’s a very good perfume; it easily lasts me about 7 hours and projects wonderfully. I’ve received compliments from people in my circle. I highly recommend it for cold seasons where it will shine better. I’ve used Tom Ford’s TV and must say they resemble each other greatly; even feeling slight differences, I stick with this Al Haramain version for performance, price, and even presentation. A good value-for-money option. It is true that I notice a sweeter opening with prominent cinnamon compared to TV, but personally, I love it. Recommend trying it on skin first, although I repeat: I like it very much and it performs brilliantly for me.

  • JPG Ultra Nabo

    It’s really very good. Smells like typical honey sweets, generally. Looks like it will project quite a bit, much better for cold weather, 100%.

  • metroidsoldier

    This isn’t oud, but it’s very intense and sexy; if they had added oud wood to this fragrance, it would be sweeter.

  • smamafigi@gmail.com

    Great similarity with Tom Ford’s Tobacco Vanille, but with double the longevity. Excellent perfume.

  • I love it, very long-lasting. Like Tom Ford Tobacco Vanille, very, very, very similar. It’s a very well-known scent. The only downside to this fragrance and any other with the Tom Ford TV DNA is that it’s not novel. But yes, it’s worth it for the price to have in your collection.

  • Chairon Núñez Ortega

    I love it, I love it, I love it. Although marketed as masculine, the load of vanilla, cacao, and nuts leans it dangerously towards gourmand. It’s masculine due to the tobacco, but its sweetness is almost feminine (60% masculine, 40% unisex). It’s a conquest perfume, perfect for bars or formal dinners. Not for small enclosed spaces unless you want to be the centre of attention for all the wrong reasons. Lasts 10-12 hours. It’s a ‘monster’ with high projection, reaching two metres in the first three hours. It enters the room before you. Maximum five sprays. Do women like it? It generates an immediate reaction. The sweetness of vanilla and cacao is magnetic, while the tobacco and pepper maintain the ‘danger’. For those seeking cleanliness and freshness, it will be repulsive and cloying. There’s no middle ground: either it obsesses them or it makes them nauseous.

  • Mortadelo mishogino

    Bloody hell, I’ve been wearing this all day and already had to write. The presentation is top-notch, though discreet. Tested against the TF original and it smells almost the same; the difference is imperceptible. Some girls could smell it from a metre and a half away—what projection! It starts with tobacco, then chocolate, and finishes with a fine cinnamon (the vanilla is less noticeable than in the TF). Lasts easily over 7 hours. These are distinct scents and won’t suit everyone. Edit: at a party, five people complimented me.

  • I’ve been a user of Tom Ford’s Vanilla Tobacco for years and bought this blindly due to the similarity. I was disappointed at first: it tries to copy the Tom Ford DNA but falls short. You can detect the cinnamon and tobacco, but the vanilla lacks that creamy, warm touch of the original. I expected a 1:1 dupe from Haramain, which usually has the best ones, but here it’s only half there. I’ll use it for layering. It doesn’t last or project as much at first; they say it needs to breathe. Four hours later it evolves: I detect vanilla with cloves and cinnamon, while the tobacco becomes subtle. They’re 75-80% similar; it’s a more versatile essence than the designer’s.

  • Bought this out of love for the original Tobacco Vanille. At first, this version is spicier and less creamy than the Tom Ford, with a noticeable clove kick. But after a few hours, the spices mellow, the vanilla regains its creaminess, and it smells almost identical to the original. Projects massively and lasts over 12 hours on skin. Not for everyone due to the spice, but if you like it, it’s a sweet, vanilla delight. A friend who initially hated it told me after 12 hours of smelling it on me without knowing what it was that he absolutely loved it.