The Story
Why it exists.
Sunset Hour takes its name and its spirit from that brief, charged moment when the sun dips below the horizon over Western Australia, specifically Broome, as the blazing light gives way to the encroaching twilight. The Quandong Desert Peach, a native Australian ingredient with a sun-kissed tartness and an almost rhubarb-like edge, stands in for that late-afternoon light: vivid, warm, slightly sour. The fragrance opens with that same bright, almost sharp warmth, like the last rays of sun before they fade. Everything else follows the arc of a sunset moving toward dusk. The concept was straightforward: translate a specific place and moment into something wearable.
If this were a song
Community picks
Golden Hour
JVNA
The Beginning
Sunset Hour takes its name and its spirit from that brief, charged moment when the sun dips below the horizon over Western Australia, specifically Broome, as the blazing light gives way to the encroaching twilight. The Quandong Desert Peach, a native Australian ingredient with a sun-kissed tartness and an almost rhubarb-like edge, stands in for that late-afternoon light: vivid, warm, slightly sour. The fragrance opens with that same bright, almost sharp warmth, like the last rays of sun before they fade. Everything else follows the arc of a sunset moving toward dusk. The concept was straightforward: translate a specific place and moment into something wearable.
The use of Quandong Desert Peach as a structural note rather than an accent is what separates Sunset Hour from the broader fruity-gourmand category. Most fragrances in this space use peach or mango as a sweet bridge between top and heart, a way to smooth the transition without making a statement. Here, the Desert Peach carries the composition's tartness from opening through drydown, its rhubarbic edge keeping the sweeter elements honest. That slightly sour, sun-kissed quality prevents the salted caramel and coconut from becoming overwhelming. It is the difference between a dessert you eat because it is there and one you eat because it has something to say.
The Evolution
The opening lands bright and tart. Quandong Desert Peach arrives with its signature rhubarbic edge alongside Raspberry's sparkle, crisp Pear and Mandarin lift the whole start, while a thread of Salt keeps everything grounded in something mineral rather than sweet. That salty quality is the first surprise: this is not a straightforward fruity opening. It reads like the air just after the sun goes down, when the temperature drops just enough to matter. The rhubarb note sharpens slightly for the first 15 minutes before the Coconut and Mango begin to soften the edges. The heart takes over around 45 minutes and shifts the character entirely. Jasmine Sambac blooms through the Coconut, creamy, warm, with the slight indolic edge that makes jasmine feel less polished and more alive. The Green Mango adds a tartness that mirrors the opening but rounder, softer, moving toward tropical rather than mineral.
Cultural Impact
Sunset Hour occupies a specific position in the fruity-gourmand category: it carries enough sweetness to appeal broadly but enough native character, the Quandong Desert Peach, the Australian Sandalwood, to feel distinctive. The native Australian ingredient is the differentiator. It is not just a fruity-gourmand with good performance, it is a fruity-gourmand with a sense of place. The Quandong Desert Peach lends a tartness that sets it apart from more conventional fruity offerings, while the Sandalwood grounds the composition with a creamy, woody depth that speaks to the continent's botanical heritage.
The House
Australia · Est. 2016
Goldfield & Banks Australia is a niche fragrance house founded in Sydney in 2016 by Belgian-French perfumer Dimitri Weber. The brand occupies a singular position in the global fragrance landscape as Australia's first luxury perfume house, dedicated to translating the continent's distinctive botanicals into modern fine fragrance. Working at the intersection of native Australian ingredients and classical French perfumery methodology, the house has developed a collection of 19 eau de parfum expressions that draw on rare essences rarely encountered outside their native terrain. Central to the collection are ingredients such as Australian Sandalwood, Buddha Wood, Brown Boronia, Blue Cypress, and Golden Wattle, alongside introduced botanicals like agarwood cultivated in the Queensland tropics. All formulations are cruelty-free, vegan, and compliant with International Fragrance Association standards. The house produces fragrance in both Switzerland at Firmenich and in Melbourne at Australian Botanical Products, and maintains a gender-free approach to fragrance design.
If this were a song
Community picks
Golden hour light, warm and slow. That particular quality of late afternoon when everything turns amber and the air itself seems to hold heat, this is the sonic equivalent. Dreamy without being sleepy. Warm without being heavy. Tracks that feel like the sun sitting just below the horizon, not quite gone, not quite there.
Golden Hour
JVNA






























