Amber smells warm, resinous, and slightly sweet, like sun-warmed tree resin mixed with powdered vanilla and dry wood smoke. It carries a honeyed, balsamic quality with hints of labdanum (a leathery, almost tobacco-like resin) and benzoin, which adds a soft caramel edge. The overall impression is skin-close and enveloping, somewhere between incense, beeswax, and old books.
The Amber note appears across 2,163 published fragrances in our catalog. Use this page to compare how different brands work with Amber within the amber family.

Amber sits at the core of Alien, woven with jasmine and woody resins to create the dense, golden base the fragrance is known for.
Angel uses amber to anchor its patchouli-and-chocolate gourmand structure, giving the sweetness a resinous, grown-up depth.

Black Orchid leans on amber to bridge its dark florals and truffled gourmand notes, producing the scent's signature warm, slightly smoky finish.

Amber here is abstract and crystalline, paired with ambroxan and


Eros uses amber alongside vanilla and tonka to build its sweet, resinous drydown beneath the mint


Vanilla extends amber's sweet, balsamic side and is the foundation of the classic oriental accord.
Musk softens amber's resinous edges and pushes the composition closer to skin, making it feel intimate.
Sandalwood's creamy, milky wood character complements amber's warmth without adding sharpness.
Patchouli adds earthy, slightly camphorous contrast that keeps amber from reading too sweet.
Rose laid over an amber base produces the classic floral-oriental structure used since the 1920s.
Amber in perfumery is not a single raw material but an accord, traditionally built from labdanum, benzoin, vanilla, and styrax to suggest the warmth of fossilized resin. The accord traces back to 19th-century French perfumery, where chemists and perfumers reconstructed the idea of "amber" as a base for oriental compositions. Guerlain's Shalimar (1925) helped codify the modern amber-vanilla template that countless fragrances still follow.
The note appears across nearly every category, but it dominates oriental and amber-woody compositions, gourmands, and modern ambroxan-driven scents. It functions as connective tissue between top notes and base resins, smoothing transitions and extending wear time.
Pairings follow predictable but durable logic. Musk and vanilla deepen amber's powdery, skin-like warmth. Sandalwood and cedar reinforce its woody side, while patchouli adds earthy contrast. Damask rose and jasmine sit naturally on top of an amber base, which is why so many floral orientals lean on it. Bergamot, lemon, and mandarin provide the citrus lift that keeps amber compositions from feeling heavy, and tonka bean amplifies the sweet, hay-like facets.
Amber works for wearers who want warmth and presence without sharp edges. It reads well in cooler weather, performs strongly on skin at low doses, and crosses gender lines easily — equally at home in masculine ambers like Le Mâle and feminine orientals like Alien.
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Miller Harris
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