The Story
Why it exists.
Bond No 9 built its identity translating New York neighborhoods into scent, each fragrance capturing a different borough, avenue, or cultural moment. The release captures that thoroughfare's energy: a smooth ultra-male oriental fougere with a bergamot and coriander opening that pops bright and citrusy, then gradually settles into something warmer. There's a crispness at the top that gives way to a rich, enveloping dry-down, the kind of balance that makes a scent feel both refined and intimate. It's the neighborhood made wearable.
If this were a song
Community picks
Dreams
Fleetwood Mac
The Beginning
Bond No 9 built its identity translating New York neighborhoods into scent, each fragrance capturing a different borough, avenue, or cultural moment. The release captures that thoroughfare's energy: a smooth ultra-male oriental fougere with a bergamot and coriander opening that pops bright and citrusy, then gradually settles into something warmer. There's a crispness at the top that gives way to a rich, enveloping dry-down, the kind of balance that makes a scent feel both refined and intimate. It's the neighborhood made wearable.
The composition balances bergamot's citrus brightness with ambroxan's creamy musky warmth. Vanilla and tonka bean create the sweet base that makes this fragrance distinctive, while woody notes ground it in something substantial. The ambergris adds a subtle salty finish that prevents the composition from becoming overly sweet. It's this interplay between freshness and warmth that makes Lafayette Street work.
The Evolution
The bergamot hits first, bright, almost citrusy-sweet, like someone opened a window in a warm kitchen. Thirty minutes in, the coriander has softened and the apple arrives, adding a juicy sweetness that keeps things interesting. Then the ambroxan takes over. That's the real story here: this creamy, slightly musky warmth that settles against the skin like a second layer. The drydown is vanilla and tonka bean, a warmth that stays close, intimate, the kind that someone standing beside you will notice before someone across the room. Spray it on a Monday and you'll catch it on your collar Thursday morning. Still warm. Still clean. Like the ghost of a good decision.
Cultural Impact
Lafayette Street occupies a specific space in the Bond No 9 lineup, functioning as an everyday luxury, the fragrance for someone who wants sophistication without signal. Wearers describe it as the scent of someone who walks into a room and doesn't need to announce themselves. The ambroxan-vanilla base creates a quiet confidence, a dry-down that feels subtly warm and enveloping without ever tipping into heaviness. There's an easy elegance to how it wears, the kind of composition that settles close to the skin and rewards attention without demanding it. It's understated in the best sense, the olfactory equivalent of a perfectly tailored jacket.
The House
United States · Est. 2003
Bond No. 9 is a New York fragrance house that has spent over two decades translating the city's distinct neighborhoods into scent. Each fragrance captures a different borough, avenue, or cultural moment, transforming geography into something you can wear. Founded by Laurice Rahmé, the brand occupies a singular space between luxury perfumery and urban nostalgia.
If this were a song
Community picks
The scent lives in that late-afternoon window, bright bergamot light giving way to something warmer as the evening settles in. A track that captures that shift from sharp citrus to creamy warmth, from public to intimate.
Dreams
Fleetwood Mac































