The company says: 

Thichila ติชิลา 

Dancing in the moonlight
Lost in the night of seduction
Tribute to dark shadows

Based on a traditional Thai oriental incense floral style it is blended with South East Asian flowers, incense, resins, spices, sacred woods and Thai oud.  Wan Sao Lhong is the main star. In Thai folklore it is said it could be used to prepare an enchanted love potion.

Thichila fragrance notes

    • saffron, borneol, kaffir lime, jasmine sambac, champaca, gardenia, indian tuberose, myrrh, incense, amber, styrax, rose, turmeric, spikenard, nutmeg, civet, oud, mysore sandalwood, indonesian vetiver, cinnamon bark, wan sao lhong

Latest Reviews of Thichila

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Thichila is a leathery white floral. I get gardenia and jasmine the most. I tent to gravitate to masculine-leaning white florals in the spring and this one had a bit more to offer than the normal bland offerings. It doesn't skew overly tropical to my nose. The star, however, is the Thai oud (Trat?), which I think is beautifully blended. It comes through for sure in its apricot, plastic-like way. It feels like there's a suede-like leather accord in there somewhere to bolster the oud, maybe it's just the myrrh. I think I heard that this one might be discontinued, which is too bad, because it's a real stunner.
7th February 2023
269564
Thichila is an interesting one indeed. Sorry to be bossy, but I'm really going to have to insist you disregard any reviews you see for Thichila that make it out to be tremendously complex, floral, incensey, old school, or even chypre-ish – it's really none of those things. Because Thichila is one of those perfumes that happens to be composed in an Eastern style and uses complex-smelling, exotic naturals, many people – mostly Westerners – may mistake its complexity for a matter of construction. As a matter of fact, Thichila is simply one big bridge built between two massively complex materials – a natural Thai oud oil and a big, rustic myrrh. These two monoliths happen, in this case, to share a peculiarly rubbery-rooty-oily-anisic character that makes it difficult to tell where one ends and the other takes over. I find Thichila fascinating precisely because of this.

The Thai oud smells charmingly like the inside of a party balloon or a bouncy castle – plasticky, rubbery, with the far-off twang of trampled fairground straw and sticky, jammy-fruity children's handprints. It reminds me very much of one of FeelOud's more unusual-smelling oud oils, whose name I can't recall right now, but which smelled like the air that escapes from plastic lunchboxes that you're opening for the first time in three months when the new term is starting.

At some point, the sweet, plasticky rubber tube of oud rolls into the scent of myrrh – gloomy and rubbery, but also sweet and crunchy, like giant golden sugar crystals dipped in anise and spread in a hard, glittery paste across your skin. I think Thichila is, on balance, a great perfume, but fair warning – you have to love this particular style of oud oil and this particular sort of myrrh for it to be a success for you. A very specific perfume, therefore, for a very specific taste.
2nd April 2020
227663