The Story
Why it exists.
The beginning
Eye of Seven Hills is the Alghabra house channeling Istanbul's oldest skyline. The name refers to the city's legendary topography, the seven hills upon which Galata Tower once served as the main threshold, the first landmark visible to every ship approaching from the Bosphorus. In 2019, the house translated that geography into an olfactory argument: what does it smell like to arrive at a place that remembers everything? The answer begins with saffron and cinnamon, chosen deliberately. These are the materials of the spice trade that made this city impossible to ignore, the first impression that travelers carried with them across centuries. Eye of Seven Hills opens with that same insistence, the same warm jolt that says: you are somewhere that matters. The fragrance belongs to the Senses of Istanbul collection, a series that treats the city less as a setting and more as a sensory experience to be distilled, bottled, and worn.
The heart of this fragrance runs on two unlikely companions: whiskey and benzoin. Whiskey brings the barrel, that warm, boozy sweetness of wood and caramel, while benzoin brings the resin, the sticky amber that holds everything together. Together they create a mid-section that feels both contemporary and old: a bourbon glass on a antique side table, somewhere you can't quite place. Vanilla, tonka, and tobacco arrive in that heart and amplify the sweetness without tipping into confection. The orris root and patchouli add a dusty, powdery undertone that prevents the whole thing from drifting upward. This is warmth with weight, not a cloud but a coat.
The evolution
The opening doesn't meander. Saffron and nutmeg hit within the first breath, sharp and bright, carrying that distinctive metallic edge that saffron brings to any composition. Cinnamon follows within minutes, sweetening the spice just enough. For the first thirty to forty minutes, this is a warm, urgent opening, the kind that makes you glance at your wrist. Then the transition happens. The spice doesn't disappear, it folds inward. What takes over is the whiskey. Not a whisper of bourbon, but the actual smell of a glass being lifted: warm, slightly boozy, edged with vanilla from the barrel's toast. Around the same time, tobacco begins to assert itself, not cigarette tobacco, but the denser, sweeter smell of pipe tobacco in a leather case. These two materials carry the heart for the next three to four hours. The drydown is long. Very long. By hour six, the top notes are gone and what remains is the amber-oud base, warm, resinous, slightly smoky, clinging. On fabric this becomes a skin-on-oud situation that lasts into the next day.
Cultural impact
Eye of Seven Hills belongs to a wave of Western-market niche fragrances that use Istanbul as their primary reference point, a city that functions as both Oriental and Occidental, a bridge that carries meaning in both directions. Within the Alghabra portfolio, it represents the Senses of Istanbul collection's most complete statement: a fragrance that doesn't reference the city metaphorically but literally translates the experience of standing at Galata Tower and smelling the Bosphorus wind mixing with cedar smoke and-spice market warmth. Wearers gravitate toward it for the whiskey-tobacco heart as much as the oud base, describing it as the scent of someone who has traveled enough to know when to speak and when to listen.




















