The Story
Why it exists.
Blonde Amber is Vincent Ricord's contribution to Clive Christian's Art Deco collection, an homage to the era when luxury became theatrical. The brief was clear: translate the visual language of the 1920s into scent. Think geometric gold, smoky atmospheres, the warm glow of amber jewelry under chandelier light. Ricord built his composition around those contrasts, bright citrus and rum against deeper tobacco smoke, florals that bloom amid sweetness and spice. The result reads like a fragrance you'd find in the background of a Baz Luhrmann party scene, opulent, a little theatrical, entirely intentional.
If this were a song
Community picks
My Funny Valentine
Chet Baker
The Beginning
Blonde Amber is Vincent Ricord's contribution to Clive Christian's Art Deco collection, an homage to the era when luxury became theatrical. The brief was clear: translate the visual language of the 1920s into scent. Think geometric gold, smoky atmospheres, the warm glow of amber jewelry under chandelier light. Ricord built his composition around those contrasts, bright citrus and rum against deeper tobacco smoke, florals that bloom amid sweetness and spice. The result reads like a fragrance you'd find in the background of a Baz Luhrmann party scene, opulent, a little theatrical, entirely intentional.
What sets Blonde Amber apart from standard amber fragrances is its structure. Rather than launching into a warm vanilla bomb, it opens with surprising brightness, rum and citrus that feel almost effervescent. This initial clarity is the smoke's foil. As the top notes recede, the blonde tobacco emerges, dry and aromatic rather than heavy or acrid. The florals, jasmine, osmanthus, iris, don't overpower; they add complexity without softening the composition's architecture. It's a fragrance that respects its own contrast.
The Evolution
The opening hits crisp and immediate. Rum and bergamot arrive together, their brightness sharpened by pink pepper and ginger. No ambiguity here, this is a confident start. Within twenty minutes, the citrus fades as the heart opens: dried fruits and white tobacco take center stage, with tuberose and saffron adding a waxy, honeyed depth. The sillage remains strong throughout this phase, expect to be noticed. By the third hour, the base asserts itself. Tonka bean, vanilla, and myrrh create a warm creaminess while labdanum and cedar ground everything in a dry, woody finish. The vetiver keeps it honest, preventing the composition from tipping into sweetness. Blonde Amber develops with the layered complexity of a fine perfume house, revealing different facets depending on where you are in its arc.
Cultural Impact
Blonde Amber arrives as a deliberate celebration of Art Deco opulence, its geometric gold cap and warm amber glass evoking the visual language of 1920s decadence. Clive Christian's 2022 launch channels the same spirit of unapologetic grandeur that defined the original Crown Perfumery bottles that once bore Queen Victoria's crown. The fragrance embraces theatrical projection and bold rum-citrus combinations that recall a bygone era of evening wear and social confidence.
The House
United Kingdom · Est. 1999
Clive Christian sits at the intersection of Victorian heritage and modern luxury perfumery. When designer Clive Christian acquired the Crown Perfumery Company in 1999, he inherited a fragrance house with royal credentials: Queen Victoria herself had granted the company permission to display her crown on its bottles back in 1872. Today, Clive Christian creates perfumes of unusual depth and concentration, each carrying that same royal imprimatur. The result is fragrance that feels less like a product and more like an object of quiet, enduring prestige. With fragrances like the Original Collection and Private Collection, the house has built a reputation for craftsmanship that justifies its position among the world's most distinguished niche perfumers.
If this were a song
Community picks
This fragrance sounds like late-night jazz in a low-lit room, rum and citrus bright like a brass section, amber warmth like a cello sustaining the low notes, tobacco dry like the exhale between verses. Think smoky, warm, unhurried.
My Funny Valentine
Chet Baker






























