The Story
Why it exists.
Air Oud arrived in 2024 as part of OHTOP's Artistic Collection, the brand's second wave of fragrances expanding the house's palette beyond its initial shiso-and-yuzu signatures. Karine Vinchon-Spehner conceived this one around a single provocation: what if oud could breathe? Not the dark resin monster that fills rooms and announces itself, the kind of cool morning in a moss-covered temple, light and clean and meditative. The air accord isn't just a name. It's the structural idea: keep everything translucent, let the oud float rather than anchor.
If this were a song
Community picks
Re
Nils Frahm
The Beginning
Air Oud arrived in 2024 as part of OHTOP's Artistic Collection, the brand's second wave of fragrances expanding the house's palette beyond its initial shiso-and-yuzu signatures. Karine Vinchon-Spehner conceived this one around a single provocation: what if oud could breathe? Not the dark resin monster that fills rooms and announces itself, the kind of cool morning in a moss-covered temple, light and clean and meditative. The air accord isn't just a name. It's the structural idea: keep everything translucent, let the oud float rather than anchor.
The transparent oud is the whole point. Most interpretations of the material lean heavy, resinous, dramatic, the olfactory equivalent of a declaration. This one keeps things herb-fresh and airy, like a breeze over stones where you can almost smell the sea. The cypriol and frankincense add a quiet smokiness, but it's mist rather than incense, thin and diffusing rather than dense. The sandalwood and patchouli in the drydown do the quiet work of keeping everything grounded without adding weight. That's the innovation: oud as a whisper rather than a shout.
The Evolution
The opening sparkles. Orange blossom and saffron lift the air accord, rice adds a starchy freshness, and the herbs keep everything translucent, cool and clean and herb-fresh. That ozone quality opens the scent wide and removes any heaviness from the oud theme right from the start. Even here, a hint of smoke shimmers in the background, but more like thin mist than dense incense. The heart arrives quietly: cypriol and frankincense settle in, adding aromatic depth and a subtle resin warmth without weighing things down. The oud doesn't disappear, it shrinks. Settles into the fabric of skin rather than overpowering it. Seven hours in, the drydown reveals what remains: a whisper of sandalwood, patchouli doing the quiet work, and that signature air accord still pulling against the woody base like a counterweight holding the whole thing aloft.
Cultural Impact
Air Oud occupies a specific position in the oud conversation: the accessible, herb-fresh alternative. The transparent approach challenges the assumption that oud must be heavy and dramatic to be authentic. For wearers who've been curious about the note but intimidated by its traditional interpretations, this is the bridge. For oud devotees, it might feel like a compromise. The community is divided on whether that's a feature or a flaw, but the fact that it's worth having that conversation is itself the cultural impact.
The House
France · Est. 2021
OHTOP is a Franco‑Korean fragrance house that emerged in Paris in 2021. Founded by Romeo Oh, the brand began with a line of unisex cosmetics before expanding into perfume in 2023. Its catalogue blends Korean botanical notes such as shiso and yuzu with a contemporary French aesthetic, offering a concise selection of unisex scents that speak to a cross‑cultural sensibility.
If this were a song
Community picks
Like the scent itself, a conversation between lightness and depth. Contemporary classical and ambient textures mirror Air Oud's herb-fresh transparency and the quiet Woody base that emerges over hours. The playlist breathes with the fragrance: expansive at the opening, intimate in the drydown.
Re
Nils Frahm






























