Homage Attar fragrance notes
- taifi rose, silver frankincense, tayyiba attar, sweet amber, silver oud, al andalus attar
Latest Reviews of Homage Attar
Homage Attar
You can't put this on and not notice the quality. It's syrupy and rich like Extraits used to be. A tiny dab creates a cloud around me. It may even fill the room. I know it's supposed to be a rose, but it just doesn't strike me as rose, for whatever reason. Too rich, too bright? Maybe too fruity? Too much incense and shadow? It's so complex; there's so much going on. The opening strikes me as pines. And then pineapples. And then roses, but a lot of other things, too. Woods and resins and incense. It's headache-strong without being piercing. I appreciate that it's a masterpiece of high-quality materials and design, but honestly I don't like to wear it.
You can't put this on and not notice the quality. It's syrupy and rich like Extraits used to be. A tiny dab creates a cloud around me. It may even fill the room. I know it's supposed to be a rose, but it just doesn't strike me as rose, for whatever reason. Too rich, too bright? Maybe too fruity? Too much incense and shadow? It's so complex; there's so much going on. The opening strikes me as pines. And then pineapples. And then roses, but a lot of other things, too. Woods and resins and incense. It's headache-strong without being piercing. I appreciate that it's a masterpiece of high-quality materials and design, but honestly I don't like to wear it.
Amouage's homage to the lovely rose dials in a surprising amount of jasmine while initiating its journey with a potent dosage of white musk that alludes a little too fervently to cleaning products. At least this was my first impression upon letting two light golden drops fall on my wrists after tearing open my package that had arrived from Oman.
After moving around and switching rooms, eventually the liquid elixir began to open up into a scent that felt quintessentially classic and, at first blush, a bit feminine. "But there's no way that I've smelled this on a woman before," I thought.
Fast forward three weeks later and Amouage's attar has grown on me. It smells clean and sexy and unlike my usual wardrobe of oil spills, rotted woods, burnt incense, and rose. In fact, Amouage's Homage smells like a departure from the flower. Is this what they were trying to effect in the naming of their fragrance, a kind of adulation of the rose by way of its omission, much like Islamic art's forbiddance of representing God in human form? It could be that I just need to train my nose to understand nuance. Or perhaps Montale's Highness Rose or Abdul Samad al Qurashi's Taif Rose have set the bar so high (and so clearly). Or maybe I got the "soapy" stuff of the red box, like some of our other reviewers...
Whatever may be the case, I've ended up liking Homage not because of its rose, or lack thereof, but because of its oud that lies nestled in the deep recesses of this attar's dry down. Warm, amber-tinged, bordering on imperceptibly cheesy, and certainly deep, the "silver oud" (whatever that means...) that forms part of Homage's base is quite nice and just funky and woody enough–but only if you inhale deeply!
Taking the advice of a reviewer on a different site, I enjoy layering Homage with Jubilation XXV. The attar's potency shines through for the first 2 hours, inflected by Jubilation XXV's berries, before it begins to bow out as the latter's musky base takes over.
After moving around and switching rooms, eventually the liquid elixir began to open up into a scent that felt quintessentially classic and, at first blush, a bit feminine. "But there's no way that I've smelled this on a woman before," I thought.
Fast forward three weeks later and Amouage's attar has grown on me. It smells clean and sexy and unlike my usual wardrobe of oil spills, rotted woods, burnt incense, and rose. In fact, Amouage's Homage smells like a departure from the flower. Is this what they were trying to effect in the naming of their fragrance, a kind of adulation of the rose by way of its omission, much like Islamic art's forbiddance of representing God in human form? It could be that I just need to train my nose to understand nuance. Or perhaps Montale's Highness Rose or Abdul Samad al Qurashi's Taif Rose have set the bar so high (and so clearly). Or maybe I got the "soapy" stuff of the red box, like some of our other reviewers...
Whatever may be the case, I've ended up liking Homage not because of its rose, or lack thereof, but because of its oud that lies nestled in the deep recesses of this attar's dry down. Warm, amber-tinged, bordering on imperceptibly cheesy, and certainly deep, the "silver oud" (whatever that means...) that forms part of Homage's base is quite nice and just funky and woody enough–but only if you inhale deeply!
Taking the advice of a reviewer on a different site, I enjoy layering Homage with Jubilation XXV. The attar's potency shines through for the first 2 hours, inflected by Jubilation XXV's berries, before it begins to bow out as the latter's musky base takes over.
ADVERTISEMENT
On my skin HOMAGE was mostly a faint soapy rose over a cloud of frankincense with hints of neroli brightening it somewhat in the beginning. Despite a more-than-generous application, the depth and range of development I had come to expect from such a fabled attar did not materialise. What's going on, Amouage?
Surely anyone would have been forgiven for having similarly sky-high expectations. It even drove me to seek out and blind buy a decant of the red box vintage just to make sure I get the really great stuff.
Don't get me wrong. It's not bad, just that its symphony seems lightweight in the deeper bass section. There's no oud, no amber, no sandalwood to offer deeper contrast and anchor the composition. Projection is weak but lasts well as a skin scent. Had this been a blindfold test there was a mid-phase where I might even pass it off for an aldehydic Chanel which under ordinary circumstances is a big compliment. But we are talking about THE legendary' Homage from Amouage; this experience was nothing if not a major letdown.
Surely anyone would have been forgiven for having similarly sky-high expectations. It even drove me to seek out and blind buy a decant of the red box vintage just to make sure I get the really great stuff.
Don't get me wrong. It's not bad, just that its symphony seems lightweight in the deeper bass section. There's no oud, no amber, no sandalwood to offer deeper contrast and anchor the composition. Projection is weak but lasts well as a skin scent. Had this been a blindfold test there was a mid-phase where I might even pass it off for an aldehydic Chanel which under ordinary circumstances is a big compliment. But we are talking about THE legendary' Homage from Amouage; this experience was nothing if not a major letdown.
I utterly expected to swoon over Amouage's Homage. Everything I'd ever read sang its praises to the heavens. Unfortunately, for me the dry down is far less interesting that its soft and beautifully rosy and rounded opening. I would describe this base as being surprisingly crystalline and almost, but not quite "soapy." For me, this lemon and saffron base becomes the focus of the whole thing, and it irritates instead of pleases. I find it slightly thin and somewhat sharp and screechy. (You may now feel free to throw large rocks in my direction.)
Homage & Tribute, Tribute & Homage... BAWK!!!
'Bout as close to one another as a hawk to the moon Alice! I must've not been listening close enough though and tried and tried. Homage simply did not let me in.
Yada, Yada, Something about me in a dream being emperor of new clothes, smellin' like green rose and jasmine, and wondering whether I'd appreciate it any more if it were wafting off my queen and not thee.
Oh well, different strokes I guess... and it's entirely probable this old-school wet-shaver is doing it wrong.
'Bout as close to one another as a hawk to the moon Alice! I must've not been listening close enough though and tried and tried. Homage simply did not let me in.
Yada, Yada, Something about me in a dream being emperor of new clothes, smellin' like green rose and jasmine, and wondering whether I'd appreciate it any more if it were wafting off my queen and not thee.
Oh well, different strokes I guess... and it's entirely probable this old-school wet-shaver is doing it wrong.
instant ecstasy...just what I needed...something else to go on my wish list...i get a kaleidoscopic cloud of rose /oud/wood and citrus floating up to my nose...i'm kind of speechless...this is a hard fragrance for me to describe...has everything going for it , exquisite blending and top notch ingredients...it can be pigeon holed as a rose/oud fragrance , but it's one that is in a class of it's own...in a weird sort of way it can also be called a woody/citrus scent with a flavoring of rose...i'm gonna cut it short and sweet here because that's about all I can say...it's hard to put into words the beauty of smelling this....
Your Tags
By the same house...
Jubilation XXV ManAmouage (2007)
Interlude ManAmouage (2012)
Reflection ManAmouage (2007)
Epic WomanAmouage (2009)
Interlude WomanAmouage (2012)
MaterialAmouage (2021)
EnclaveAmouage (2020)
Opus XIV : Royal TobaccoAmouage (2022)
PurposeAmouage (2023)
GuidanceAmouage (2023)
SearchAmouage (2023)
LineageAmouage (2023)
Other fragrances from 2008
Chloé (new)Chloé (2008)
1 MillionPaco Rabanne (2008)
The One for MenDolce & Gabbana (2008)
Versace pour HommeVersace (2008)
Love in BlackCreed (2008)
Viva La JuicyJuicy Couture (2008)
Dans tes BrasEditions de Parfums Frederic Malle (2008)
Sycomore Eau de ToiletteChanel (2008)
Italian CypressTom Ford (2008)
Insolence Eau de ParfumGuerlain (2008)
Miss Dior Blooming Bouquet (previously Miss Dior Chérie Blooming Bouquet)Christian Dior (2008)
Tabacco ToscanoSanta Maria Novella (2008)