The Story
Why it exists.
The beginning
The Al Qurashi Blend is the house's own signature, the blend that wears the family's name, built around the oud-sandalwood accord that Abdul Samad Al Qurashi has perfected. It represents what the family returns to: not a single material, but the particular tension between them. Oud that doesn't apologize. Sandalwood that stays. Lemon that cuts clean. This is the house reading its own history and deciding what it wants to say next.
The house knows oud can overwhelm, and that understanding shapes this blend. Within minutes, Italian lemon's brightness arrives, cutting through the richness to let lily of the valley add a powdery softness that makes the whole composition wearable rather than confrontational. Sandalwood doesn't compete with oud, it grounds it, giving the drydown somewhere warm to settle. The result is an oud for someone who's not sure they like oud yet.
The evolution
The opening hits like a window thrown open in a dark room, Italian lemon and oud collide, bright and resinous at once. Within twenty minutes the citrus recedes and lily of the valley takes over, powdery and floral against the lingering darkness. The heart holds amber and sandalwood in equal measure, warmer than the start suggested. By the second hour the florals fade and the base asserts itself: oud deepens, sandalwood becomes creamier, musk threads through everything. Eight to ten hours later, it's still there, close to the skin, warm, resolved.
Cultural impact
The house of Abdul Samad Al Qurashi, with roots stretching back to 1932 and mastery of high-purity oud since the 1970s, created a blend that demonstrates how sophisticated blending can create something greater than raw intensity. The combination of notes creates a profile that appeals to those who want cultural depth without confrontation. The blend demonstrates how elegant Arabian tradition can coexist with refined contemporary taste, appealing to wearers who want sophistication over assertiveness.
























