The Story
Why it exists.
The beginning
Rosa Galore arrived in 2019 from perfumer Jordi Fernández, working within Attar Collection's quietly confident house language. The name announces itself: abundance of rose. But Fernández built it as a duet from the start, Damask rose paired with violet, the tart berry edge of blackcurrant keeping both honest. Caramel enters to soften. Cedar roots everything. The result is a rose that doesn't perform. It accompanies.
The choice to pair lily of the valley with caramel in the heart is the move that defines this fragrance. Lily of the valley can skew medicinal, sharp, almost soapy. Here, the caramel wraps around it, turning that green edge into something warm and approachable. White musk in the base doesn't project loudly. It lingers. This is a fragrance built for the skin rather than the room, intimate by design, not accident.
The evolution
The opening lands clean and tart: Damask rose and violet arriving together, blackcurrant providing a bright counterpoint that stops the petals from cloying. It's immediate. Uncomplicated. You smell it and understand it within seconds. As the fragrance unfolds, Caramel rises, not the sharp burnt sugar of a Gourmand, but something softer, powder-dusted. Lily of the valley follows, its green edge tempered by the sweetness around it. Cedar provides grounding, a woody frame that keeps the florals from floating away entirely. By the second hour, this is a warm, intimate thing. The kind of scent another person notices only when they're close enough to touch. The drydown is where the Attar Collection philosophy shows. Vanilla and white musk don't announce themselves. They merge with the warmth of skin, becoming something quieter than fragrance, a sweetness that lives in fabric and memory.
Cultural impact
Attar Collection has built its reputation on natural, alcohol-free compositions using high-quality materials. Rosa Galore represents a softening of the house's typically austere approach, introducing rose and caramel notes that appeal to those seeking warmth and sweetness. The fragrance sits at the intersection of traditional attar craftsmanship and modern floral sensibilities, offering something for both the connoisseur and the newcomer. The house has long attracted customers who want luxury without alcohol as a carrier. Rosa Galore continues this tradition while meeting the market's growing appetite for approachable, comforting scents.





















