Sultan Pasha Attars Poudre Noire Review +The Dust to Dust DRAW

 

Margaret Alice Murray first female professor of archaeology in history

Margaret Alice Murray. Photo treatment by dana for Sultan Pasha Attars Poudre Noire

#didyouknow…

…that Margaret Murray (1863-1963) was the first female professor of archaeology in history? Born in Calcutta, she is a groundbreaking presence in the theoretical landscapes of Egyptology, folklore, and feminist political reform. In 1908, she was the first woman ever to unwrap a mummy, that of Khnum-Nakht. She did so using a revolutionary, interdisciplinary approach that set the basis for what is now known as the “Manchester Method”.

What follows is a fictional bit of correspondence with her sister, Mary. All facts and names mentioned are historically accurate.

Margaret Alice Murray

 From spectacle to science. Photo treatment by dana for Sultan Pasha Attars  Poudre Noire

 

27th of April, 1899

Dear Mary,

You may have already heard the news; if I am to guess, the family must have burst knowing of my personal implications with Professor Petrie, half in horror at my lack of a commitment ring and half with delight that I am no longer what they’d dread as an old maiden at their door. Nonetheless, I am here to confirm our rather friendly disposition to one another, but also to mention the slightly more enticing fact (for me, at least) that I have been appointed a Junior Lecturer. I am, thus, the first woman lecturer in archaeology in the Kingdom, which is to say my learning of the hieroglyphs (in German, no less, and clouded by Herr Griffith’s perpetual smoke) paid off.

At least he smells good, although his predilection for bitters and burning tree clays left our expedition crew with an unexpected tradition: whenever we want to bellow a shoutout, we tap the ashtray first.

Yours,

Margaret

Poudre noire Sultan Pasha Attars

The Two Brothers of Deir Rifeh. Photo treatment by dana for Sultan Pasha Attars

 

28th of May, 1907

Dear Mary,

It’s a wrap, as Standen likes to say. The Deir Rifeh is now officially closed, and we remained on the rim, in silence, as the workers dragged the last of the tool carts away. There are no words to describe the emptiness of a site once its bearings have been stripped- its idleness is almost palpable, as if the tomb is what gave this place life, in a way. We all sat quietly to gather our thoughts and once again doubt our right to lift one’s body out if its chosen rest– but as we watched the last particles of dust settle and the fires go out, we were reminded of the thin sheer layer of protection we may be able to offer these mummies in the years to come.

That, and the selfish hope I’ll be the one to first look at them with more respect than given past.

Yours always,

Margaret

Sultan Pasha Attars poudre noire

The unwrapping of Khnum-Nakht. Photo treatment by dana for Sultan Pasha Attars

29th of June, 1908

Dear Mary,

If you haven’t yet read the papers, two days ago I completed the unwrapping of Khnum-Nakht. Never again a mummy will be “unrolled” as a curiosity for those who pay the most; never again will they be poked and paraded as a circus exhibition and with no regards to their dignity; never again will we impose such mascarades to those who can’t give us their consent. That is not science, and I will not stand for it.

At the unwrapping, Miss Hart-Davis was my secundo; in attendance I also brought Standen and Mr. Wilfred Jackson, the addition of whom, I hope, will professionalize us as scholars and will provide substance as only a marriage between disciplines can… chemistry and paleomedicine will therefore no longer be left out from any study on mummies. Not, at least, while I’m alive. Although I’m the first to admit I can be a bore.

Yours,

Margaret

P.S. I was so nervous that I shamelessly grabbed someone’s pipe and tried to smoke it. It didn’t help, but it meddled with the almost pristine linen strips and filled my nostrils with something I will never forget, because luck had it my mummy was dry as a bone and retaining faint traces of herbs within its folds. From dust to dust, here, could not have been more appropriate.

Sultan Pasha Attars Poudre Noire review

The DNA of Poudre Noire. Photo treatment by dana for Sultan Pasha Attars

Historical awakenings are the hardest thing to look into- obsolete by nature but important by role, they are both timely and timeless- very much a time travel conundrum. And yet, we seek their detachment with the same thirst we unwrap mummies to make sure they’re preserved: layer by layer, fascinated by newness in something as old as time.

Poudre Noire by Sultan Pasha does not portray talcum, nor is it some goth nouveau vintage powder fragrance. It—at least to my nose—is powder, or dust, as you will. Surprising and atypical for a concoction destined to simply smell, it’s made of three strata of sensation: one is textural, the second- perfumed, and the third- almost gravitational. The opening is smooth and polished, vaporous, almost etheric, and cold: cutting tuberose, spicy geranium, flinty smoke (styrax?) and a briny, iodiny tinge seem to surround what’s there to be experienced, providing context and tooling as precise as an operating block.  As Poudre Noire starts to settle, one has an almost visual rendering of unfolding layers upon layers of smell, rather individualistic but working together in sequence: pulpy lilac accords, slight stone fruit, velvety roses, and a very beautiful, sweet jasmine (albeit brief) open up to unveil the center. Throughout, a bit of almond, hanging in the air but slightly separate from all the rest. Lastly, in the depths, dense and heavy, the core: sticky resins and balsams, leathery bits, pungent animalic waxes, fermented grasses, thick honey, and a slightly anisic, dark pipe tobacco are packed together so tightly, nothing else can go through. Or matters.

Disclaimer: Poudre Noire selected by me and provided for analysis directly by Sultan Pasha Attars. Thank you.

dana sandu, Sr.  Contributor

Thanks to the generosity of Sultan Pasha or Sultan Pasha Attars, we have 3 ml of Poudre Noire  (£150.00 )for one registered reader anywhere in the world. You must register if you have not done so here. To be eligible, please tell us what surprised you most in dana’s review of Poudre Noire, and where you live. Draw ends 11/30/2019

Follow us on Instagram @cafleurebon  @a_nose_knows  @sultanpasha78

We announce the winners only on our site and on our Facebook page, so like Çafleurebon and use our blog feed … or your dream prize will be just spilled perfume.

 

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74 comments

  • Sergio Teixeira says:

    Wow Dana, what a complete picture. I feel as if I’m sitting alongside Margaret unveiling the multiple layers of the unwrapping. Everything is a bit overwhelming, the dust, the smells, the dryness, the excitement, the discovery…Fabulous. If the scent is in any way close to the Story/review “painted” by Dana we are in for a treat for sure. Count me in. Portugal, Lisbon

  • Kinda creepy thinking of unwrapping the mummy and the smell of the herbs in the wrapping smoking the pipe. If this scent is anything like that it would be different. USA

  • I really enjoyed the letter format as well as the Powder vs. Dust issue. Being a huge fan of both powdery notes and soil accords that makes my mind tingle with curiosity – which is only enticed by the breakdown of notes.
    Thank you,
    Ana from Porto, Portugal

  • Would I scare children if I wore this? It’s certainly worth a try. I’m most surprised that the jasmine is so fleeting… Where does it go? I live on the USA.

  • I loved how Dana described this as polished, etheric, and atypical of powder perfumes (which I do love). The layers of florals and fruits sound heavenly and altogether different from what we may be used to smelling in this genre. I am so grateful for this draw, thank you! Live in the US.

  • This sounds wonderfully strange, and those fictional letters are wonderful. I would love to sample this. I’m in the US.

  • I was most surprised by how dana described this fragrance as outright powdery as well as dense and heavy at the core. Sounds like a very interesting perfume that has got character. Would love to give it a try. Regards from USA.

  • I liked dana’s vivid description of the scent, even if it made me pause to wonder (not seriously) about whether it would make me smell like an unwrapped mummy. The “time travel conundrum” is what makes this so interesting, the possibility that the fragrance will work like a trip into the past (when the notes were fresh) combined with a view of the past from the present (whereby the notes are dried or aged or barely remaining). I admre her ability to pull out all the different notes and discuss them. I live in the US, in North Carolina.

  • I am really fascinated that In 1908, she was the first woman ever to unwrap a mummy, that of Khnum-Nakht. She did so using a revolutionary, interdisciplinary approach that set the basis for what is now known as the “Manchester Method” Also intrigued by Lastly, sticky resins and balsams, leathery bits, pungent animalic waxes, fermented grasses, thick honey, and a slightly anisic, dark pipe tobacco notes. Cheers from UK

  • Really fascinating to know that Margaret Murray (1863-1963) was the first female professor of archaeology in history. Intrigued by the basenotes sticky resins and balsams, leathery bits, pungent animalic waxes, fermented grasses, thick honey, and a slightly anisic, dark pipe tobacco. Thanks a lot from UK

  • Poudre Noire invokes elements of vintage powder cosmetics. It is resinous, waxy, and has tobacco elements, too. USA

  • I’m always amazed at reviews for this line. I’ve never read anything negative, the attars seem to take the wearer on a journey through layers upon layers of beauty. Someday I’ll take the journey myself! I’m in the US and thank you for another great review & draw.

  • I loved the storytelling in this review. Scents can’t just be defined. That’s why imagery is so evocative with these fragrance ads. Dana’s description was like finding a locked coffer, inside old powders and dried creams that you realize were used for makeup. Great work! Coming in hot from NYC!

  • What a beautifully historically painted review ! Dana is a fine wordsmith which manages to captures the feeling of a scent in just a few compelling phrases. Would love to try Poudre Noir ! Based in Europe

  • What an interresting way to write a perfume review! Reminded me of the a novel, the signature of all things, where a female botanist is depicted. Love to try the perfume, Ana, Romania. Multumim, Dana! 🙂

  • Absolutely love Sultan Pashar. I once tried his samples and his scents are lovely and subtle. A smooth opening and floral easy layers but with and undertone of dark pipe tobacco reminding me of my great grandfather. Could I ask for more? Living in the EU

  • This was a really neat style of review. The fictional letters were really interesting and provided context to the later description of the attar. I have never tried an attar at all let alone a Sultan Pasha Attar. It sounds so different and new and intriguing to me. Really enjoyed this piece. Thanks for the generous draw. In the USA.

  • Yana Lysenko says:

    Love such educational reviews! Sultan’s work is deeply complex and I love the connection between scent and story. Would love to win this attar because I adore all sorts of powdery scents. Greetings from Germany.

  • This precious perfume intrigues me a lot, even the small sealing wax bottle is full of charm. Attar for us Westerners are unusual (yet it is the oldest form of perfume). Reading the story of a perfume, here in an epistolary form, teaches the passion that generates it. Tanks
    Linda – EU

  • I was really surprised to read that so many (seemingly extremely) different notes work so well together. Really would like to smell that for myself so count me in. I’m from Germany.

  • This is really intriguing, the review unveils the atmosphere, but it’s si descriptive that you almost feel the smell… yet can’t… so I would be so happy to be able to try it! Thanks, Dana, for the review! I live in Romania, EU.

  • I do like powdery perfumes. I have never tried an attar of any kind so I welcome this opportunity of a draw. US

  • Oooh I’m so pleased that this is a draw for one of Sultan Pasha’s attars. I love what he does and he works so hard to produce some amazing perfumes. This review is great because it tells people about what he does and describes the layers that he manages to achieve in all his work. The words evoke the “taste” of the attar, the feel and the texture so well. Wonderful!! I live in the U.K.

  • Wow. That was a fun read! It was surprising just to read imaginary letters. The description of the scent is surprising. The idea of the scent is surprising. It is all surprising! And Poudre Noire sounds so weird and great. I am in the USA

  • I crave the unusual, so Poudre Noire sounds fantastic! I would have loved to watch the unwrapping of Khnum-Nakht. Thanks for another fabulous draw! USA

  • This must be like nothing i smelled before. I loved to read those letters. It made me feel so close to the action. I admit im curious about the smell of new unwrapped mummy, as im a medicine student and i weekly spend time in the disection room. The smell here is very unpleasant, nothing like herbs and perfume. Anyway, to include the smell of a mummy for the description of a perfume is so strange, that only dana could make it. Good job, girl! Again, you wrote a very good article! Andreea grusuzache from romania

  • This doesn’t come as a surprise! It’s a classic dose of monosodium glutamate coming from Dana. It sparks curiosity, gets you to enjoy it and then leaves you craving for more. More words and more perfume. <3

  • This doesn’t come as a surprise! It’s a classic dose of monosodium glutamate coming from Dana. It sparks curiosity, gets you to enjoy it and then leaves you craving for more. More words and more perfume. <3 from Romania.

  • vaporous, layered and dense! sounds fantastic, and lovely. same goes for the fictionalised correspondence. cheers from california

  • I always get so giddy when one of Sultan Pasha’s attars is listed for a draw. I’d love to get my hands on some of his work!
    I was most surprised by Dana’s description of Poudre Noire’s layers. It is as if the dust has settled over the other sticky, waxy, notes, as dust would cling to the surface of these ingredients in real life. It sounds quite lovely indeed! I also enjoyed the bit of historical fiction about Margaret Murray.
    USA

  • What a fascinating review, Dana! I must confess that I’ve never heard of Margaret Murray before which is a shame: she is a fine example of a scholar and a feminist. Will look into her life and work.
    Poudre Noire is another mystery that needs exploring: how on Earth can a powder – any powder – smell like heavy florals, resins, leather and whatnot? Needless to say, I’m intrigued.
    Russia

  • Thank you, kind folks, for your words. Happy you’r having as much fun reading this as I did writing it 🙂

  • Very interesting review with nice story.
    I am intrigued by “not talcum, nor vintage powder..” and “surprising and atypical” powdery perfume..WOW!!!
    And pyramid of this perfume- amazing richness!
    Unfortunately, I have never tried Sultan Pasha attars.
    from Armenia

  • So complex and many-layered perfume- flowers, leather, resins, tobacco, honey…. WOW !!!! I can not imagine what kind of perfume it is. I like ceremony of laying pure perfume oils or attars, and i would like to win this new perfume, even more I am not familiar with Sultan Pasha attars.
    Armenia

  • Dana, you definitely should write a book! The review was fabulous, to depict the layers of a perfume as unwrapping a mummy is something I would never thought about! I would love to try it! Thanks for the review and for the draw! From EU, Romania

  • I love everything about this. I have not tried anything by Sultan Pasha, but I have heard amazing things. I quite enjoyed the letters in this review. From Canada.

  • Beautiful review about a powerful and inspiring woman. The fragrance seems deep, rich, perfect for this season. I love powdery scents so I am excited about this draw! I live in the USA.

  • sultan pasha is the most superb on the market. what surprised me the most is the vaporous opening. can’t wait to experience this. usa

  • I loved that Dana, as every time, offered us not only a description of a perfume, but a glimpse to culture, historical information and at the same time a fun fact which blends right at the seam where the interest for perfume stops and life itself starts. It was wonderful to read Margaret Murray’s correspondence and bits about her life and work.
    coming to the perfume, what was surprising was the description of the perfume itself, as opposed to the elements in the collage. Flowers, honey, vanilla and I was expecting it to be a floral bouquet dripping with sweetness. It would be exciting to smell how can “powder, or dust” still unravel all these notes and keep them true. Thanks for a lovely review and draw. I am from the EU.

  • I am intrigued by the way of describing the scent and how it develops in layers like, well, uncovering a mummy. I am curious if the image painted in my head would resemble the actual smell.
    Cosmin – Romania

  • What surprised me was how this review of Poudre Noire turned out to be so visual. Unwrapping layers of mummy cloth with the backdrop of the smells of the dry desert. Thank you Dana for a great review and Sultan Pasha for the kind giveaway. I’m in USA

  • Definitely the story telling and slight tinge of unease and horror unseen. Well done Dana! Based in Canada 🙂

  • For me Poudre Noire sounds very unique but also very nice. I like those floral notes. Thanks for the chance. I live in Europe.

  • carlos_lager says:

    The dense heavy base notes sound great together. Very interesting note list.Thank you Dana for another great review. I loved the fictional letters. I live in Austria, EU

  • thank-you for this well written review. i wouldn’t have the guts to unwrap a mummy, however i am mostly very curious/nosy. While I admire Margaret Murray’s accomplishments (i look forward to reading more about the Manchester Method) I’m surprised that i feel some sorrow and conflict over the study of mummies to begin with. However I realize the value of this study. Also, I know that the letters are fictitious but it makes me wonder that were they not, is that an invasion of Margaret’s privacy too? Poudre Noire is expressed so wonderfully by you and I would love to see how the different notes reveal themselves. All the best from Canada.

  • Liliana Dobrinescu says:

    I appreciate Dana’s ability to tell us stories. Even i can’t appreciate Sultan Pasha’s Poudre Noire ,it will remain in my brain ,using my imagination. Lili from Romania

  • Dana makes Poudre Noire sound like a very complex and intriguing. I would love to test and try it for myself. Thank you Sultan Pasha and Cafleurebon for another wonderful draw. I live in EU.

  • What an interesting life she lead (and a long one). I never knew that mummies were unwrapped. I don’t gravitate to powdery perfumes, but this one must be special. Interested in the almond throughout, but yet being separate. Thanks Dana. USA.

  • Wow Dana! Loved all the letters and descriptions! thank you. I would love to try Poudre Noire. Thank you for the chance. The mummy surprised me.
    USA

  • I liked the analogy Dana made about how this perfume opens layer by layer, just like the discovery of a mummy or some other sacred remains. Her reviews are always so coherent and yet very original. I am from the EU.

  • The racy letters were pretty surprising. I’m in USA. Sultan Pasha is a holy grail. I don’t own one because I can’t afford them. This would be amazing. Wow.

  • How can it be gravitational, this attar perfume drop down?! This description fascinates me, it’s like a perfume energy. Thanks, from Romania

  • I think what is surprising is the inclusion of the florals and resins in this fragrance. It is most intriguing. Thanks for a really interesting review of history and a generous draw. I’m in the USA

  • dana’s reviews are always a fine piece of literature!
    thank you, dana and thank you, Cafleurebon!
    Diana from The Netherlands

  • Nicoleta.Tomsa says:

    Beautiful, atmospheric and informative review, as always with Dana. Reading the story, in an “ancient-aliens” sort of connection I had these lyrics from one of my favorite songs playing on repeat in my mind: “Ashes to ashes, funk to funky /We know Major Tom’s a junkie /Strung out in heaven’s high/Hitting an all-time low” (david bowie).
    I would LOVE to smell Sultan Pasha’s interpretation of dust. Regards from Romania.

  • Dear Dana, reading your vivid review was like traveling back in time; I was that anxious shadow exploring, alongside Margaret, the ancient mummies, the mysteries of egiptian land! Aaaand now I’m back, and it would be an honour to sniff the scented dusts of time from Sultan Pasha’s Poudre Noir attar!
    Love, Diana, from Romania

  • redwheelbarrow says:

    I loved reading the letters! This one sounds interesting for sure. I’ve not had the pleasure of trying any fragrances from Sultan Pasha but keep hearing such great things. Thank you for the draw. I’m in the US

  • I was most surprised by the creative epistolary intro to the review (I think Dana just invented a new genre of perfume review: the epistolary vignette inspired by true events). The mummy unwrapping imagery was very evocative. Great writing and very fitting for a Sultan Pasha attar! Greetings from Bucharest, Romania, EU.

  • wallygator88 says:

    I really liked the way dana talks about the journey that this fragrance takes – it’s pretty intense.

    Love from Madison, WI, USA!

  • catalina_dragan says:

    The association between Margaret’s story and the perfume, the edited photos. It is both intriguing and atypical to review a fragrance in this manner, wow. Hope to have the change to sniff it 🙂 Regards from Romania

  • I have red so many reviews on attars, but i have never had the chance to try one for real and i must admit that Sultan Pasha Attars are between the ones i would be so interested in discovering. Hope i will have this opportunity since i enjoyed so much Dana’s review. Congrats! Wish you all a Happy Thanksgiving Day! Kisses from Romania EU

  • Radulescu Mihaela-Cristina says:

    “Chemistry and paleomedicine ” this can be surprising and not really, when we talk about Dana’s review. Thank you for the draw , from EU.

  • Excellent review by Dana and I loved the letters by Margaret Alice Murray! I loved the unwrapping and powder vs. dust. I truly believe that we are in for an amazing treat with Attars Poudre. Thanks for the giveaway and I live in the US!

  • I love the story of Margaret Murray unwrapping the mummy. I’m attracted to this Poudre Noire and would like to experience the release of all its’ accords. Thank you for this special draw.,

  • m.r.everything says:

    The fragrance alone has to be amazing because it was made my none other than the man himself… Sultan Pasha! What surprised me most about Dana’s article is all the history that this fragrance conjures up. I did not know any of the info about Margaret Murray, nor did I even know who she was! I am glad I read this as it was very interesting! I love reading about history and seeing historical photos. The black and white photos with the small amounts of added color is genius and looks great! This review has not only made me want Poudre Noire, but it has also made me do a little research on Khnum-Nakht! Thank you, Dana, for the great visuals, and beautiful history lesson with a fragrance thrown in! Thanks you Team CaFleureBon, as always, for putting this together, and thank you Sultan for your generosity! I know this is going to be a good, no great one, because you composed it! I live in Delaware, US.

  • I never thought that a smell can be preserved for thousands of year. Any smell. Must be amazing to travel to ancient history by your nose’s experience. I live in US.

  • Dana’s review always surprises me with its uniqueness and the work done. Congratulations on this beautiful description of the perfume. Thanks. From EU.

  • Dana is definitely a nerd and consummate educator. I just spent an hour and a half reading about Margaret Murray’s theories and her critics all thanks to Dana. Honestly I’m not surprised by anything Dana writes. Who else but Dana can weave mummification and a forward-thinking woman together to give us a sensory review of an attar. I really want to try Poudre Noire. USA

  • Dana as always my dear you shock and surprise me in the most serendipitous ways! this has got to be one of the best pieces I have read thus far about my work, alongside Robert’s review about Moonlit Reverie and I’m well and truly honoured ❤️❤️

  • The depth and complexity of the layers of this fragrance were quite surprising to me. With a name like Poudre Noir, I would have expected a relatively straightforward scent, but the nuances- cold and ethereal to soft and floral to dense, thick, and dark- sounds much more appealing than the name might otherwise indicate. Would be delighted to give this fascinating sounding attar a try! I am in the US 🙂

  • I’m surprised and wondering how the letters were discovered after so many years. I love history.
    I live in USA.

  • What a connection amongst historical characters, memory and perfume – never thought of those things in this way. A fantastic prose. Needless to say I love Sultan Pasha Attars. (UK & Bangladesh)