The Story
Why it exists.
The beginning
Gold Tuberose Nights joins the Arabian Nights collection, the Jesus del Pozo fragrance family known for opulent, sensual compositions that draw from warm Oriental heritage. The collection has built its reputation on raw, high-quality materials, nothing synthetic, nothing half-committed. This release takes the collection's signature warmth and channels it through a lens of nighttime glamour, where florals grow lush and gold under artificial light.
Tuberose is the kind of note that divides rooms. Some find it overwhelming, almost indolic. Here it's tempered by coconut and cashmere wood, materials that soften the blow without dulling it. The result is a tuberose that reads creamy rather than sharp, tropical rather than screeching. Paired with plum's dark fruit and pink pepper's subtle heat, the composition manages to feel both exotic and grounded, like standing somewhere warm while the air conditioning hums in the background.
The evolution
The opening hits fast, bergamot bright and pink pepper's clean spice arrive first, clearing the path for the tuberose and jasmine to follow. Within minutes the florals dominate. This is when the fragrance announces itself, projecting outward for the first hour or two before pulling closer to the skin. The heart belongs to coconut milk and plum, sweeter and softer than the opening, while orange blossom threads through the middle like a quiet reminder of the florals still running the show. By hour three, cashmere wood and vetiver arrive, adding a dry woody backbone. The base is where this earns its longevity, vanilla, amber, and musk settle into the skin and stay. Eight to ten hours is the reported range. On fabric, some wearers say it ghosts into the next day.
Cultural impact
Part of the Arabian Nights line, which has built a following for quality that punches above its price point. The 2020 release brought the collection's warm signature into more overtly floral territory, a risk that paid off for those who like their tuberose dressed down in coconut rather than up in aldehydes.

























