The Story
Why it exists.
The beginning
Turathi Blue arrived in 2021 as Afnan's answer to a specific problem: men who wanted a citrus fragrance that didn't disappear before noon. Perfumer Imran Fazlani built the composition around the tension between effervescence and warmth, an effervescent opening that bubbles with citrus brightness, anchored by amber and woody notes that refuse to let go. The amber brings a golden warmth that softens the sparkle, while the woody notes provide a grounded counterpoint that develops as the top notes fade. It's a fragrance for men who want to smell like they showered and dressed with intention, without announcing that fact to everyone in the room.
What makes Turathi Blue interesting is that mineralic note, the sharp, dry quality responsible for its effervescence. Most citrus fragrances rely on brightness alone. This one has a structural spine underneath the sparkle. The combination of citrus, warm amber, and musk creates a scent that evolves rather than evaporates. It's a composition that understands its audience: men who want something clean and masculine, but who also want it to still be there when the day runs long.
The evolution
The opening hits bright and effervescent, bergamot, mandarin, that particular sharp mineralic quality that makes the whole thing fizz. Ginger adds clean heat. The composition builds from there. Then the amber arrives, softening the edges. Woody notes follow, giving the heart structure. The warmth doesn't compete with the freshness, it coexists. By hour three, the musk enters the conversation, adding a clean skin-close quality. Patchouli and spices hold the base, creating a drydown that stays woody and close. The evolution isn't dramatic. It's a slow, confident hand-off from brightness to warmth. What lingers is the amber-musky warmth, not the citrus spark. Moderate sillage means it stays close, present in the room, not filling it. The next morning, there's a faint trace of warm musk on skin.
Cultural impact
Turathi Blue has found its audience among men who want citrus without the emptiness. The longevity and moderate sillage make it a daily driver for many, a fragrance that works, lasts, and doesn't announce itself to everyone in the room. Value-conscious wearers gravitate toward it for what it delivers relative to what it costs. It's the kind of fragrance that converts skeptics: someone tries it expecting budget performance and finds a composition that actually evolves on skin.





















