The Story
Why it exists.
The beginning
François Demachy built this in Dior's La Collection Privée, the house's most exclusive line, where perfumery gets to be art without apology. The name says everything: oud and rosewood, two of the most coveted materials in perfumery, woven together in a single composition. It's a statement of intent from a perfumer who rarely holds back.
What makes this work is the way Demachy refuses to let either wood dominate. Oud brings depth, darkness, a certain rawness. Rosewood brings warmth, a kind of polished quality that keeps the oud from becoming heavy-handed. They're natural counterweights. The fruit notes, raspberry and quince, sit underneath the whole thing, adding a sweetness that keeps the composition from feeling austere. This is a fragrance that knows what it is and doesn't need to explain it.
The evolution
The opening hits warm and slightly tart, raspberry fruit with quince keeping things structured. Within twenty minutes, the sandalwood arrives, and with it a creaminess that softens the whole thing. The animalic notes in the heart are present but not aggressive; they add a closeness, a sense that the fragrance is coming from skin, not sitting on top of it. By the second hour, the base takes over: oud and rosewood in a dense, warm drydown that keeps going for hours. On clothing, it lingers longer than on skin, you'll find it in a scarf the next morning.
Cultural impact
Oud Rosewood sits in Dior's La Collection Privée, the house's exclusive line where there's no constraint except excellence. It was built for someone who already knows what they want from a fragrance, not an introduction to oud, but a deeper conversation with it. The 2020 launch reflects a growing appetite for woody Orientals that push beyond convention.


































