The Story
Why it exists.
The Bade'e Al Oud collection explores what Arabian perfumery means in the 21st century, and Honor & Glory takes its name seriously. The name combines two Arabic terms that together suggest something precious and distinctive. The collection draws from the region's rich olfactory heritage while embracing contemporary sensibilities. Warm spices and deep resins form an integral part of the composition, creating a fragrance that speaks to both tradition and modern taste. The interplay between bright fruit notes and rich, enveloping warmth gives this scent its character, inviting the wearer into a world of layered complexity.
If this were a song
Community picks
Golden Hour
TV Girl
The Beginning
The Bade'e Al Oud collection explores what Arabian perfumery means in the 21st century, and Honor & Glory takes its name seriously. The name combines two Arabic terms that together suggest something precious and distinctive. The collection draws from the region's rich olfactory heritage while embracing contemporary sensibilities. Warm spices and deep resins form an integral part of the composition, creating a fragrance that speaks to both tradition and modern taste. The interplay between bright fruit notes and rich, enveloping warmth gives this scent its character, inviting the wearer into a world of layered complexity.
What makes Honor & Glory stand out is how the Crème Brûlée note behaves. Unlike fragrances where caramel reads flat or synthetic, here it arrives already caramelized, the sugar has already hit the torch. Pineapple keeps it from becoming cloying, adding a bright acidity that cuts through the sweetness like citrus zest over crème vanilla. The turmeric in the heart is unusual. It doesn't smell like the spice in curry, instead, it adds a faint earthy warmth that prevents the composition from floating entirely into dessert territory. This is sweet that knows where it came from.
The Evolution
The opening hits sweet and bright. Pineapple upfront, crème brûlée just behind. For the first twenty minutes, it reads almost like a tropical cocktail, fruity, optimistic, playful. Then the spices arrive. Cinnamon and black pepper emerge gradually, not as a sharp turn but as a slow deepening. The heart phase lasts longest on most skin types, three to four hours of warm spice and benzoin's resinous sweetness, creamy without being heavy. By hour five, the drydown settles into sandalwood and vanilla, with a mossy undertone that keeps it from going entirely soft. The cashmeran adds a powdery warmth that lingers close to skin well into the evening.
Cultural Impact
Bade'e Al Oud Honor & Glory occupies a notable position within the contemporary fragrance landscape. This scent brings together bright tropical notes with classic warm spices in a way that feels both familiar and fresh. The combination of creamy caramel and fruity sweetness creates an inviting impression, while underlying layers of resin and wood add substance and character. Such compositions demonstrate how modern perfumery can bridge different traditions, blending accessible sweetness with deeper aromatic complexity. For those exploring beyond conventional Western fragrances, this offers an entry point that rewards continued attention.
The House
United Arab Emirates · Est. 1980
Lattafa Perfumes is the United Arab Emirates powerhouse that turned the fragrance world on its head. They offer a taste of Arabian luxury and high-end scent profiles without the exclusive price tag, making them a gateway for many into the world of perfumery.
If this were a song
Community picks
Late-night warmth. The kind of sweetness that doesn't need to prove anything, confident, intimate, a little indulgent. Think low lighting, soft textures, the exhale after something good.
Golden Hour
TV Girl






























