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Oud Mood

4.03 de 5
2,068 votos

Acordes principales

Descripción

Oud Mood by Lattafa Perfumes is a fragrance from the olfactory family for men and women. The top notes are rose, saffron, and Jamaican pepper; the heart notes are oud wood, caramel, floral notes, and patchouli; the base notes are woody notes, resins, amber, incense, and musk.

Resumen rápido

Cuándo llevarla (votos)

  • Invierno 41%
  • Primavera 15%
  • Verano 7.8%
  • Otoño 37%
  • Día 34%
  • Noche 66%

Notas clave

Comunidad

2,068 votos

  • Positivo 75%
  • Negativo 13%
  • Neutral 12%

Pirámide olfativa

Estructura completa de la fragancia: de la salida al fondo.

Salida 3 notas

Comunidad

Qué dicen los usuarios sobre propiedad, preferencia y mejor momento de uso.

Propiedad

¿La tienen, la tuvieron o la quieren?

Uso recomendado

Estación y momento del día con más votos.

Dónde comprar

Compara tiendas verificadas para Oud Mood y elige según envío, precio o disponibilidad.

Amazon

Amazon

Envío rápido

Entrega rápida y política de devoluciones conocida.

Ideal si priorizas velocidad y disponibilidad.

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eBay

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Más opciones de precio, formatos y vendedores.

Útil para comparar alternativas antes de decidir.

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Características

Resumen de votos sobre longevidad, estela, género y percepción de precio.

Longevidad

Escasa

Débil

Moderada

Duradera

Muy duradera

Estela

Suave

Moderada

Pesada

Enorme

Género

Femenino

Unisex femenino

Unisex

Unisex masculino

Masculino

Precio

Extremadamente costoso

Ligeramente costoso

Precio moderado

Buen precio

Excelente precio

Reseñas

Experiencias reales de la comunidad sobre uso diario, rendimiento y estela.

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40 reseñas

Mostrando las más recientes primero.

  • Yesterday, April 24th, I received this fragrance, very beautiful bottle and cap, but what’s inside is fantastic, an EDP that I think is a wonder. 8 applications in total, rose and saffron with the smell of the richest caramel, which is one of its notes. Oud, vanilla, and amber. Nothing generic, nothing synthetic, and despite the notes having nothing to do with each other, I feel it’s similar to Pure Tonka, with the difference that Oud Mood has a very high trail and projection, I don’t even highlight longevity because it’s endless. I appreciate the reviews from Darkbeat and Casablanca 77; they don’t exaggerate at all, and thanks to their comments, I decided to buy it blindly. I pay about $70, and it should really be worth much more compared to $200 perfumes that disappear in three hours. It’s been 6 hours already on my skin and it’s still projecting. Projection 10, Trail 10, Longevity 10, Price 10. Don’t miss this wonder. It’s a very personal opinion, and I respect those who don’t consider it so. Warm regards from Argentina.

  • Emorandeira

    I was able to try this fragrance thanks to Darkbeat’s generosity, and I couldn’t be happier. Happy because I tried a wonder, but also because I got rid of a thorn. The scent is spectacular. The mix of rose, saffron, oud, and the caramel sweetness is exquisite, probably one of the best Arab perfumes I’ve tried. I find it ideal for any situation and climate, although here, accustomed to fresh aromas, it might clash a bit in the heat. Its performance is very good; it lasts a lot and projects quite well, although I don’t see it as a beast; it’s very manageable and discreet. So, great. But I also got rid of a thorn: I had been trying to get it for a while without good results. Living on an island has good and bad things, and European laws that prevent flying with alcohol make it difficult. On two occasions I ordered from the UK and France, and both refunded me claiming that Correos returned the package for violating international legality… 😠😠😠 But then Darkbeat arrived, sent me a sample, and finally I could try this wonder and realize it’s quite similar to a perfume I already own (Shaghaf Oud by Swiss Arabian). No matter how much I love it, I actually don’t need this Oud Mood from Lattafa (at least until the Swiss Arabian one finishes). It’s true they aren’t identical. I tested a flis of each on each hand to compare, and there are differences. But they’re similar enough that I no longer feel the pain of not being able to get it. On a trip to the peninsula, I’ll try again to see if I can get it in my luggage 🤣🤣🤣 Scent: 10, Longevity: 10, Trail: 9, Quality/Price: 10, Versatility: 8, Global: 10.

  • jerry drake

    Tremendous perfume with excellent aromatic quality and very satisfying longevity/trail. A sweet bomb, smoky, with a top-tier amber and a slightly animalic oud note at the start, very Arabesque (one of the main differences if compared to the optimal brother Shaghaf Oud by Swiss Arabian), which fades in intensity and accompanies the development of this fantastic Oud Mood without annoying at all. Add caramel, something vanilla-like, and you’ll be trapped in this magical world for hours with 4-5 sprays. As my friend Darkbeat notes (who often opens his treasure chest to gift me samples), if a niche house released this proposal, we’d surely pay quadruple without blinking. Ladies and gentlemen, we are in front of a full-blown perfume masterpiece. If you dare to try it, you’ll discover an exuberant and uncomplicated scent that will make the wearer shine with their own light, bringing out the star each one has inside. Fantastic is an understatement.

  • Spectacular. Rarely have I sat down to write with so much nervousness and passion. I admit it’s unconsidered after only a couple of uses, but I couldn’t help letting myself go. Oud Mood is deliciously Arab and intoxicating, a wonderful scent that brings to mind walks in the souks of Fez or Chauen, shopping in Amman, Damascus, or Cairo, afternoons having tea in a Tunisian café. All the positive reviews were right, and I hope to do it justice. It comes with rose and saffron surrounded by a very delicate, soft, and wearable oud, nothing aggressive to my nose, and settles into a delicious smoky aroma of amber, vanilla, caramel, and patchouli. It’s a sweet patchouli that makes me think of my beloved Lord of Misrule from Lush, with Sumatra patchouli. Its trail is moderate-to-high and longevity on my skin is about 12 hours, even with moderation. It’s a fragrance that forces you to be a master in dosing. I think it can be wearable in many situations if applied with measure, or become a seduction bomb if applied generously (without overdoing it) in a nocturnal environment. The bottle looks very cool to me; it evokes a gothic corset. Its cap is heavy metal. The box is another story, that extravagant Arab luxury sometimes so overloaded and kitsch. I will definitely buy it again when I finish it, although with the performance, I don’t know if I’ll ever be able to. Best quality-price ratio I’ve found. Finding a different scent of this quality at this price invites reflection on the current industry… Scent 10/10, Longevity 10/10, Trail 10/10, Quality/Price 10/10, Versatility 7.5/10, Packaging 9.5/10. Would I buy again? Yes.

  • Review of Oud Mood by Ard Al Zaafaran, EDP 50ml. The box is identical, ivory and gold colors, same drawings, but square. The bottle is more generic, with that typical Arab perfume shape. As Darkbeat explained, it’s like Lattafa’s most normal line. It’s potent at the start, complex, and so well-blended that you don’t think about the notes separately. It has a defined personality. It’s not linear; the notes shine in turns in a delicious succession. The rose is fantastic, suggesting a tea rose with so many petals, mixed with a woody and sweet oud. This rose grows in a secret garden alongside royal kitchens that escape saffron and roasted vegetables in a Moroccan oven. They also prepare spiced sweets with nuts and very caramelized, almost burnt sugar. There’s a hint of simple soap and something talc-like and clean, like nostalgic flashes of the resinous and smoky syrup. I find it very warm and woody. It reminds me when my sister brought a piece of sandalwood on Christmas Eve, burned it a bit, and tried to spread the smell; we all laughed because it smelled burnt, like a bonfire. Yes, but a sweet and appetizing bonfire, like in Oud Mood. Sweet incense sticks and cones appear, comforting and warm. Only for winter; I use it at home lately, though I’ve also used it to go out with friends. It has a moderate trail for a few hours with 2-3 sprays and all-day longevity on the skin. It lasts days on clothes. It’s an option if you like smoky and sweet fragrances with rose, oud, gourmand caramel, and amber. Maybe abstain if you prefer light perfumes because it’s a bit intense.

  • OscarCyranista7

    I’m another ‘debtor’ to Darkbeat thanks to the decant and the advice. I have no words to describe the value: it outperforms designer perfumes costing double or more in projection and longevity. It’s an intoxicating and resounding scent. I’m a novice in oud, but now owning Rose Oud (more refined and spicy) or His Majestic of Oud (more elegant and subtle), I can assure you that Lattafa’s Oud Mood Elixir is for the bold; it sits right on the gourmand edge, especially if you haven’t tried an Arab scent before. Abstain in enclosed spaces, offices, etc. Four sprays for outdoors are more than enough. I love sweet perfumes and have always felt comfortable in the unisex world (Egoiste was my signature, the only thing I bought since I was 20, 29 years ago; it was normal for me when a daring man of my age wore at most Fahrenheit).

  • Naluapilar

    Another wonder from the Thousand and One Nights, plus great value. I discovered it only a year ago, and other Arab treasures that make many niche perfumes look pale. Not if you’re looking for something discreet or don’t like oud (though it always deserves a try). I think it’s a wonderful unisex scent; I especially enjoy it when it’s cold and at night. Scent, trail, longevity… and all for war-torn budgets. A solid 10.

  • A beast in longevity, projection, trail, and sillage. So much that if not used moderately (2-3 sprays), it can become intense, annoying, and give you a headache. Nothing to object to regarding the price. It resembles Lancôme’s Oud Bouquet, an Arabian souk version, and it achieves it quite well. Although it’s well-made, having them side by side, it feels more crude and cheap. The rose and saffron stand out, very prominent, giving way to praline, incense, pepper, and oud. The oud is recognizable. It seems like a gourmand from a book: almost edible sweet notes, prominent patchouli, intoxicating, persistent, intense, nocturnal, and warm. Also spicy notes and an oriental base; although adapted to Western tastes, you can still see that Arab remnant. I would use it in winter or autumn. Edit: I sold it after a few wears; it was annoying and difficult, not too elegant or versatile, it felt too much for daily wear. It’s iterative, flat, and tiring.

  • The perfume is decent, but it’s not groundbreaking or revolutionary for the industry. The bottle is pretty and well-designed, but the juice leaves much to be desired: it’s dark, spicy, with smoky woody notes and saffron (if you don’t like this note, stay away). The other notes don’t stand out; it’s a very linear scent. I see it as resinous, dark rose, woody, and spicy, with no gourmand vibes. It’s rough, harsh, bold, and intrusive. I used the last bottle to scent the elevator corners, and for two days the smell lingered, lingering and pungent. Lasting power is otherworldly, but the scent is complicated. I don’t recommend buying blindly; you’ll regret the money. I won’t buy it again. Zero versatility, though it works well as an elevator air freshener, it’s excessively expensive for that.

  • Wow! Delicious fragrance, I can’t stop smelling it. Heads up: if you have Opulent Oud, do not buy this; it’s 99% identical. I wore it at 7:30 PM and it was still perfect at 9:00 PM. It’s a treat! Buy it, you won’t regret it even a little. Perfect.

  • With so many good reviews, I thought I’d be surprised, and it did, but for the worse. It’s a sweet rose-oud combo like many current ones, but it smells like low-quality perfume. The oud is terrible and has upset my stomach. Yes, it has brutal fixation and trail, but I wouldn’t want to meet someone smelling like this in a closed space.

  • Rose, caramel, and oud, elegant and sweet in a gourmand style. Very Arab and with quality at a ridiculous price. Notable trail for the first 3 hours, then intensity drops; I expected more, perhaps due to my pH, but on clothes it lasts days with delicious vanilla or caramel, nothing cloying. You’ll hit the mark buying this beauty from Lattafa. Smells like unsurpassed quality, nothing generic.

  • I started with Arab perfumery with the ‘black beast’ Armaf Club de Nuit Intense, worn by gentlemen but feminine. I tamed that beast, an elegant rose with oud. So confident, I sought Oud Mood. They spoke of caramel, rose, and vanilla, I thought: ‘if I tamed the beast, I’ll tame this little caramel’. I put it on Amazon, but yesterday I saw it in-store and the saleswoman sprayed it on me. I need you to explain where the caramel or vanilla is… the ROSE? This was indeed the black beast. Potent on all fours, comparable to gasoline (but doesn’t smell like gas). What they called ‘smoky’ was a burning sensation in my nostrils. It’s the only perfume in my 41 years that has upset my stomach. DO NOT buy without smelling it. I removed the beast from the cart gagged.

  • Sweetvanille

    I’m starting 2023 with Dubai nostalgia. I bought it casually on Amazon for €30 and it transported me to The Walk in Dubai Marina, surrounded by people smelling like this. I’m back home. It lingers without being aggressive. It has a sweet and woody halo; the oud stayed in my hair, I swear it smelled like honey, but it must be the caramel. Extremely elegant. I have Montale, Taouer, DarkOud, and Rose Kazan, and Lattafa has joined my oriental family. Already looking for another from the brand, highly recommended.

  • I was swayed by the good reviews and bought blind without knowing it; it disappointed me greatly. Not what was expected, neither sweet nor gourmand. Smells very alcoholic and synthetic, dominated by saffron, woods, and frankincense. Longevity and projection are a bomb, exceeding 24h. It’s not a bad perfume and for the price it’s a good option, but DO NOT buy blind.

  • Oud Mood is spectacular! It gives expensive perfumes a lesson in quality, naturalness, and projection. A fresh, bold rose gives way to a real caramel that blends perfectly. As it dries, vanilla and rose in a beautiful amalgamation. You can feel the oil on the skin, prodigious quality, the best I’ve smelled in a long time. High-end perfumery at a ridiculous price.

  • Oud mixed with spices. Not for everyone, very distinguished, though I love it. Recommend testing first. 2h on skin with a 3-4h trail, light.

  • LosPerfumesDeJavi

    Oud Mood is a gem: expensive, luxurious, and lasts all day. Unisex with woods, resins, amber, caramel, rose, pepper, saffron, oud, frankincense, and patchouli. Smells strong but rich. The best part? Ridiculous price! Lasts and projects more than expensive perfumes. The bottle is heavy and elegant with its fabric ribbon, a visual masterpiece.

  • Juliana Aude

    Wow, smells great but gets intense quickly; be careful not to overdo it, better to test before buying.

  • Polydistortion

    I think this is the most reviewed perfume I’ve read (even after buying it). I’m grateful my nose is made for this scent, I found it very pleasant, though I understand the rejection from others (they have their reasons). Unfortunately, many don’t have where to test fragrances and we rely on reviews to buy blind, hoping not to waste money in vain.

  • I bought it blind based on reviews and liking to take a risk. I loved it, I confess, but I’m writing this to help anyone thinking of buying it. The keyword is: sweet. If you don’t like sweetness, don’t even think about it. In my case, the caramel is noticeable from start to finish. It’s not a subtle sweetness, but a solid cloud with strong oud and amber, which can go wrong on a sunny day. The good thing is it doesn’t smell like talc; if you curse talc in sweet scents, this one doesn’t have it. At first it reminded me of perfumes from the nineties for adult women, it reminds me of them occasionally, but subtly. It’s unisex, playing between borders, I appreciate floral and caramel notes in men’s fragrances. It’s for a man who smells for himself, not for others. Fall with wind and winter are its seasons. For me, 2 or 3 sprays are enough for 3 hours of trail and all day on the skin. It’s for adults (I’m 39), someone younger might find it heavy.

  • CarmenZamora

    This perfume is a challenge. The notes reach the back of the nose and scratch the throat. Still, it’s excellent: decisive, imploding, always present. Not suitable for soft or citrus noses. The trick is to dose it: spray upwards and pass through that arc of fragrance so only the mist gets on you.

  • aldrinho10

    Same as the previous one, I’m not an expert in notes. But it comes out very strong, with a cloying sweetness. Watch the sprays, I bought it blind and live on the coast. I managed to tame it by spraying just a few drops; on open nights it’s a beast. When it dries down is when I really like it, lasts forever with a great trail, even until the next day.

  • I LOVE IT, it’s my first Arabic perfume bought blind. I’m not an expert, so no jargon, my take: at first I smell the oud and woody notes, it’s sweet but not cloying. When it dries down it smells like caramel and vanilla, on my skin it’s delicious. People have already praised it. At first I was afraid it might be too masculine, but it’s unisex leaning feminine. Lasts forever, the trail persists. I put it on at 2:00 PM and could still smell it at 12:00 AM.

  • Alejandra Alfaro

    It’s a very strong scent. I thought it would be better and almost disappointed me. I didn’t love it, but I hope to give it another chance.

  • jotauelei

    I bought it blind based on the price, and honestly, it’s delicious. At first, it’s shocking, a dry hit of smoky saffron with a marked rose, but after a while it improves and smells clean. The rose is very noticeable; I think it would benefit from a bit less caramel. Projects quite well and lasts about 6 hours. For my first Lattafa, it’s a 7, and obviously, I’ll stick with this brand.

  • I bought it for myself, I’m a man, but it smells very feminine. Sophisticated and sweet. Perfect for night outings in cold weather, winter, or fall. Beastly opening of rose, pepper, and caramel; projects like crazy for the first 3 hours, then moderates. Lasts about 7 hours, but clings to the skin until 10 hours (BEAST). Sweet to no end, then the caramel melts with the oud in a great combination. Watch the amount, it can be overwhelming.

  • Elegant and sophisticated, a beast mode for sure. Be careful with the sprays, as they can cause olfactory fatigue. If you hate sweetness, run: that initial caramel note is dominant, though it softens later. Despite everything, it’s an Arabic fragrance by definition, very well executed. The powerful dry down is balanced by roses that soften the trail. The oud is easy, nothing animal, and adds complexity. Saffron, amber, and incense are there but subtle. Ideal for Arabic fragrance lovers, with caution and in cold climates.

  • Spe-c-ta-cu-lar. Blind buy and a complete hit. It’s balanced and intense (watch out for fast shooters west of the Guadalquivir), elegant. Its unisex character leans it slightly toward women, but that’s secondary; my wife will appreciate it. I predict days of ‘you or me’ or coffee for everyone and out on the street. By the way, it’s not meant for the summer heat in my region; autumn and especially spring are its battlegrounds. The mix of rose, a ‘mini-oud’, vanilla, little woods, resins, and amber creates a gazpacho that’s supremely comfortable. A little sweet, but nothing cloying. Elegant, I repeat. Very good projection, and as for longevity, let me test it for the afternoon; I couldn’t resist writing this more than two hours after four sprays. The dry down is great, and for now, that’s the guy. And on top of that, the price…

  • Raphael Luna

    First off, I’m not a perfume expert, but this made me want to share. I bought it blind due to the hype and price, fearing it might be too feminine or strong. When I put on Oud Mood, my fears were confirmed: the opening is strong with roses, pepper, and some wood. I thought about gifting it, but after a few minutes, the scent changed; the sweetness blended with the roses and wood to create something strange but never bad: sophisticated and suitable for men (though unisex, leaning female). The longevity is excellent. It was a risky but winning bet. I’ll see if letting it macerate, as people say, makes it even better.

  • I bought it blind, guided by reviews. It’s dominated by roses and oud with a sweet caramel touch. It’s intense, more masculine, and believe me, knowing its origin makes you feel like an Arab sheikh. It has mystery, but the sweet note grounds it. For now, it’s one of my favorites from the brand. It has the DNA of Al Wataniah Rose Mystery Intense, but with a more present oud and a rose that’s more masculine, dark, and gothic, with a hint of woody resins. It lasts a long time. Want to stand out? Buy it.

  • I don’t have it and won’t, but I endured wearing it for six straight months because a college friend insisted. It’s very invasive and exaggerated. I’ve almost forgotten the scent, but I’ll never forget that cloying caramel note. It’s not a hateful smell, but with daily exposure, it becomes boring.

  • Camilo Navarrete

    I’ve tried Shagaf Oud and Oud Saffron by Orientica; this one takes a similar path but has a more synthetic and chaotic opening. However, it develops well and by hour one, it smells much nicer with that pink-oud accord. It doesn’t reach the quality of Oud Saffron, but for a fraction of the price, it’s an option worth considering. 7/10.

  • It’s a masterpiece. Delicious smoky roses and lots of incense, typical of Arab perfumes. It’s enveloping and distinguished, though it’s heavy and not everyone likes it. It lasts about ten hours on my skin and up to twelve on clothes. I love it and will keep buying it to stand out.

  • I like it, but only occasionally. It smells heavily of leather and oud. I made the mistake of wearing several similar fragrances in a row and got saturated. Now I’m trying to reconnect with this scent.

  • barianidelcap

    I got it while testing my dad’s collection and I’m hooked. It’s a powerhouse fragrance—expensive and sophisticated. It’s heavy and lasts forever. At first, it smells weird, floral and spicy, but then it sweetens. I detect notes of whiskey and old wood in the dry down. If you overapply it or get too close, it’s overwhelming. Two or three sprays are plenty. It’s not for everyone; I can’t imagine any woman wearing it.