The Different Company Al Sahra Review (Émilie Coppermann) 2020 + I Dream Of Rain Draw

Al Sahra by The Different Company

Al Sahara 100ml, photo by The Different Company

 

I have always loved the desert. One sits down on a desert sand dune, sees nothing hears nothing. Yet through the silence something throbs, something gleams…“ – Antoine de Saint-Exupery

The first time I ever saw golden dunes of Sahara desert I was fourteen years old. All the books I’ve read about it, each and every documentary I’ve watched, photos or first-hand experience stories I’ve heard didn’t prepare me for what I felt on a sizzling late June day, once I rushed to take the trekking boots off and let my bare toes sunk deep into that hot, orange-reddish-golden sand of North Africa. I was there, a small dot in the infinite universe, yet the universe was as much a part of me as I was the part of it.

The different company Al Sahra review

Sahara Deset, photo  by Pexel

The first time ever I saw its face (as the song goes) I thought that the sun reflected in it and that if only more people could see the Milky Way as it can be observed from the pitch-black darkness of Sahara starry nights, the world would definitely be a better place. Do you remember that scene from the movie Contact, when Jodie Foster is trying to describe her contact with extraterrestrial life, somewhere behind Vega? The moment when she is crying in awe, lacking the words to describe the beauty of what she felt? This is how I must have looked when Sahara, the most alien place on Earth, entered my veins for the first time.

Starry, starry nights, photo by Pexel

The feeling of infinity. Overwhelming, consuming, soul-moving, humbling infinity: I’ve never felt more connected to Nature, never felt more alive than in the (seemingly) vast emptiness and silence of Sahara.  I fell in love with it irrevocably, promised that I shall return and kept returning: from the Atlas Mountains downwards in Morocco to Mali,  from borders of the Nile Valley at Aswan in Egypt to the Nubian desert, from the Mediterranean Coast down to entire Phoenician and Roman cities conserved in the sand, and the other way –  leading to the Red Sea side,  each time taking a small quantity of sand from different locations with me. I’ve traveled to many other deserts all over the world, few are still on my bucket –list, but my first love, my Sahara is the one that I feel at one with.

The Different Co. Al Sahra

Al Sahra sample, photo by Elena Cvjetkovic

Al Sahra. Sahara. It was very brave indeed to name a fragrance after her (I always refer to deserts in the feminine gender, just look at the lush curves of dunes), ancient and mighty, soft as smooth sand of its endless dunes and harsh as suffocating winds that rage above its surface.

Emilie Coppermann of Symrise

 Master Perfumer Emilie Coppermann of Symrise courtesy of the Fragrance Foundation

 Master Perfumer Emilie Coppermann, working with The Different Company for over nine years, dared to express a different olfactory emotion, a vibration of Sahara, an Oriental that doesn’t fall anywhere between Floral Orientals to Woody Orientals, the warm and sensual, vanilla and spice fragrances: the only rose I’ve ever seen in Sahara is a desert, stone rose. The other precious stones there are salt rocks, bricks of salt that the proud Tuareg traditionally exchanged for food and supplies, traveling in annual Azalai caravans across Mali…yes, they were the salt of the Earth, and salt was once worth the same as gold. A desert stone flower it is, a new creation of an Oriental-Mineral!

The Different Company Al Sahra review

My Souvenirs From Egypt, Location: Western Desert near Al Wahat (Oasis) Al Kharjah, photo by Elena Cvjetkovic

Al Sahra opens like Fleur de sel, a salt that forms a delicate crust on the surface of seawater as it evaporates – mineral and cold like early mornings in the desert, just before the sunrise. That crisp quality is deeply sensual at the same time, a sharp metallic breath inhaled, the one that awakes all your senses at once. Contrasts and shades emerge: a light, delicate and translucent tender vibration of Sand Lillies trembling in haze rising above the desert that is heating up underneath the piercing-hot rays of sunshine. By now you can clearly feel a distinctive salty accord, tainted with incense dust, trails of scents carried by wind that are coming from a distant oasis. Or is it just an illusion of an oasis?

The warmth comes in waves, shifting like the sand of dunes in the wind. The incense is dry and strong, curling around elegant ambery, deep and powerful Cistus, resinous in such a beautiful, subtle, almost ambergris-like, heavenly skin-musky way. The ultimate classic woody-Oriental note lingers hours later on your skin – specks of sandalwood glowing like tiny sparkling studs made of desert sand, never pulling too deep down the patchouli route, remaining elegant and graceful at all times.

Sand from Sahara Desert, location Gabr Awhn in southwestern Libya, photo by Elena Cvjetkovic

I would’ve expected this much from The Different Company Juste Chic Collection: a different approach, artistic, creative, using exceptional materials and remaining utterly elegant. There are many fragrant interpretations of Sahara: most of them are poetic interpretations written with fragrant notes of oud, roses, amber, balsamic accords or warm spices. Scents of epic sunsets observed from oasis’, palm tree leaves ruffling in the wind, breath of crimson and gold arabesque decorated heavy silk curtains providing soothing shade, depicting oriental opulence. There are also desert-themed fragrances that lean toward floral chypres, with warm, dry and mineral undertones or the sweet, gourmand ones, with date accords or smoke of incense.

Al Sahra is different, contrasting, modern and ancient at the same time: a desert rose made of salt and rock, transparent spice, dry incense, and beautiful cistus and sandalwood seal of sensuality.

Desert, desire, shadows and silence.“

And to soothe my longing for Her, I’ll spray some Al Sahra and wait for the April rains that sometimes bring Saharan dust, covering the cars in red-colored mud: I dip my fingers in those small islands of desert sand that have traveled with wind for thousands of miles and dream of dipping my toes in Her sand again. “I dream of rain, aman, aman“:

Sweet desert rose
Each of her veils, a secret promise
This desert flower.“ – Sting

Notes: Mineral accord, Salt Crystals, White Violet Sand Lily, Cinnamon from Madagascar, Incense, Cistus Labdanum, Wind of the desert, Patchouli, Sandalwood.

 Elena Cvjetkovic, Editor and Author of The Plum Girl

Disclaimer: A 2 ml sample of Al Sahra was kindly provided by The Different Company for my consideration. Opinions and feelings are – as always – of my own.

Thanks to The Different Company we have draw for a registered ÇaFleureBon reader for the EU + UK, AUSTRALIA, USA and Canada for a 15 ml travel bottle of Al Sahra. Tell us where you live and what you found most appealing in this review of Al Sahra, what your thoughts are and where you live! Draw closes3/17/2020

Photos: Elena Cvjetkovic, The Different Company, Pexels

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62 comments

  • I love how you made this desert scent a part of your world. Even though I’ve never been to a desert, I’d love to experience this perfume. Please let me win this to Germany, thanks for the draw!

  • What we need now is beauty and I am excited to try this al Sahara desert rose
    My favorite is Osmanthus by the different co.
    Please enter me I live in the USA

  • I’m a fan of The Different Company! I really liked the idea of a fragrance representing the Sahara. The notes are most appealing, especially the White Violet Sand Lily and incense. Thanks for another fabulous draw! Mich USA

  • NiceVULady says:

    “Al Sahra is different, contrasting, modern and ancient at the same time: a desert rose made of salt and rock, transparent spice, dry incense, and beautiful cistus and sandalwood seal of sensuality. What a marvelous take on the Sahara and on this fragrance. Thanks for a beautifully descriptive review and a lovely draw. I’m in the USA

  • BostonScentGuy says:

    I loved the evocative verbal images of the desert, and the “run down” of various interpretations of desert perfume. This sounds amazing–mineral saltiness mixed with floralcy and incense sounds beautiful. “Transparent spice ” sounds perfect for spring. Thanks for the draw–I am in the US.

  • Shamrock1313 says:

    Elena makes it sound dry, but quite lovely. Haven’t tried this house, but have heard good things about em.
    Pennsylvania USA

  • Very poetic review! Elena’s prose makes me want to visit the Sahara and see the Atlas Mountains. I like dry, austere fragrances with a strong mineral scent and this seems like a good fit. I want to know what white violet sand lily and wind of the desert smell like! I’m from MD USA

  • I can see where some are romanced by the essence of the desert, how it is beautiful and deadly too. The sea of sand is not for me, I think I’ll stay here in my safe world and sample yours through this fragrance Al Sahra. I have some of the sand roses from the desert they are beautiful. Texas, USA

  • Its most interesting to me that “wind of the desert” is a note?? Am I reading that right? So curious to try! USA

  • Beautiful pictures! Thank you, Elena, this perfume story feels very personal. It makes me happy that salt and mineral themes are represented in modern perfumery. I adore these scents. Al Sahra sounds wonderful. I am in the US. Many thanks for the review and generous draw.

  • Wisconsin USA
    Oh …
    this fragrance sounds so different and intriguing….translucent, warm, dry…..

  • Ooooh, desert delight us cinnamon. Sounds holy grail for private moments. Happy to have patchouli in the drydowm. Who wouldn’t love a heavenly skin musk drydowm! I live in the USA.

  • What a lovely depiction of the desert! I spent two months working in Dubai and living at the edge of the city where the sand began, and my first experience with it was far from glamorous – I, walker of kilometers normally, said “why cannot I walk to the grocery store only a mile away?”

    The sand and the wind rebuked me sharply for my lack of preparation. I turned around halfway there, my throat parched dry as bones, skin gritty and dusty, face stinging from the sand whipped into it, humbled and awed. That half-mile had felt like forever. I was far more careful afterwards.

    I love the description of this perfume, which seems to encapsulate that feeling somehow of pitiless beauty the desert has.

    I’d love to try it!! In Canada. Thank you for a lovely review!

  • I really loved the desert inspiration of this fragrance and that it’s an oriental-mineral! Unluckily I haven’t tried any of the fragrances from the line yet. I am in the USA.

  • sillage4ever says:

    I’ve been wearing L’Air du Desert Marocain for visits to Eastern Oregon’s deserts for many years and I’m always on the lookout for another perfume beauty I think might pair well with the stark and peaceful atmosphere I love escaping into. Al Sahra has all the right parts for just such an adventurous mission, plus I’ve been on a real sandalwood kick lately.

    I’m in Portland, Oregon, thanks for letting me know about what sounds like another worthy The Different Company release.

  • Wow, this looks like a very intriguing fragrance. Very poetic review that makes us travel all around the world. Very well placed literature reference in the beginning. I would love to try this scent.
    from France

  • Pixiedust2 says:

    I feel I can smell this from your beautiful description. What a wonderful article, and I enjoyed your pictures! This scent sounds dreamy. I love a salt accord, and mixed with incense, cinnamon, patchouli and desert wind, this sounds mystical yet earthy at the same time. Would love to sample this someday. California USA

  • What I loved most about the review was just how vivid the picture of a desert was painted.
    I’ve only been to a desert one as a young child but this brought back so many memories!

    From Ireland. Eu.

  • Beautiful and personal article. I liked how Elena referred to her own experience in Sahara while discovering and describing this perfume. The fragrance sounds indeed mystical and ravishing. The notes are so unique as well, salt is something one would usually associate with the sea, but I can imagine how it would fit in a desertic context. I would be delighted to try this, from the EU.

  • I’m I am wondering how it smells Like, it’s seems to me so mystic fragrance can’t imagine it in my head how Sahara smells
    Pretty much interesting review as always and nice photos comparisons from Elena Cvjetkovic.
    Well done
    I’m from Europe also
    Sorry for not so good English, I’m still trying hard

  • All the notes sound beautiful and Mysterious Mineral accord, Salt Crystals, White Violet Sand Lily, Cinnamon from Madagascar, Incense, Cistus Labdanum, Wind of the desert, Patchouli, Sandalwood. It is a house I have tried before but this fragrance sounds like something special and a wonderful description by Elena. Thanks a million from United Kingdom

  • I am intrigued by by cinnamon, labdanum, Patchouli and Sandalwood notes in Al sahra. A beautiful description by Elena. Thanks from the UK

  • TE Withrow says:

    A picture of the Sahara is really painted, vast, expansive, silent, beautiful…I live in Illinois, US.

  • I would love to smell this perfume that smells like the desert. I am curious about the mineral accord, the salt and desert wind notes. Sounds very unique. I am in the EU.

  • Strangely enough, all this idea of dunes made me think about the liberty of moving, so crushed nowadays. I am from Europe

  • Strangely enough, all this idea of dunes made me think about the liberty of moving, so crushed nowadays. I am from Europe

  • carole macleod says:

    I love the idea of a clean, calm hot place. May have to watch Laurence of Arabia this aft. The Different Company has produced many fragrances I love, and I’d love to try this. I’m in Canada. Thanks for the interesting read 🙂

  • This sounds amazing! I love incense and cistus so anything with those notes appeals to me. I am in the UK.

  • I live in California and have always loved the Mojave desert. It is meditative! In the review by Elena, I loved reading about “I dip my fingers in those small islands of desert sand that have traveled with wind for thousands of miles and dream of dipping my toes in Her sand again.” Very descriptive words and beautiful. USA

  • Deserts have always been one of my favorite places to visit, there is just something there that brings your soul into contact with a deeper beauty, with the infinite, all the while making you feel more like part of the universe. What a superbly written, gorgeously poetic review written by Elena! It really drew me into her world and how she perceives Al Sahra. It would be a pleasure to get a chance to try this unique take on a perfume inspired by the Earth’s most legendary desert. Thank you Elena for the great review! I’m in Oregon, US.

  • salosaunders says:

    Golly, what a lovely-sounding atmospheric. I have never tried a “desert” scent and I’m dying to! I live in TN, USA.

  • Very rich imagery of Sahara desert. It seems to be an unusual perfume with mineral accord and a note of salt crystals – never smelled anything like it so would love to try it. Thanks for the draw – writing from USA.

  • Wow i’m really intrigued by this perfume now… I like how the perfume is also described by what it is not… I’m attracted by its amber and incense. The photos picked to illustrate the article are gorgeous. I’m in EU. Thanks for the draw!

  • Deserts call to me as well. I have never been to the Sahara. This description overwhelms my senses with beauty. I do want a salty scent. So often salt is used in ocean scents that just don’t work for me. This desert scent might be the one that does. I am in the US

  • Dubaiscents says:

    This review and the scent really resonate with me because of all the time I spent in the Middle East and North Africa and knowing that feeling of awe at the beauty of such stark nature that so few people get to experience first hand. I like how this scent seems to take a completely new route of expressing the desert not just a “typical” amber oriental. I would love to try this. Thanks for the chance. I’m in the US.

  • Wonderful review and what an amazing experience to have had at the age of 14! Thank you for the draw, I’m in the US.

  • The Sting quote got me. Being a fan of rose scents, the description of a desert rose definitely intrigued me. Have not tried The Different Company before but thanks for introducing me to the brand. Regards from the USA.

  • I remember the first time I saw the Milky Way. It was wondrous. To see it on a desert night must have really been beyond words. Elena’s description of the Sahara is amazing. If Al Sahra can evoke these kinds of feelings, it is a must try and possible love. Live in the USA.

  • Bryant Worleyml p says:

    I live in Waldorf, MD, USA, and this description of the fragrance is what I found most appealing in the review: The warmth comes in waves, shifting like the sand of dunes in the wind. The incense is dry and strong, curling around elegant ambery, deep and powerful Cistus, resinous in such a beautiful, subtle, almost ambergris-like, heavenly skin-musky way. The ultimate classic woody-Oriental note lingers hours later on your skin – specks of sandalwood glowing like tiny sparkling studs made of desert sand, never pulling too deep down the patchouli route, remaining elegant and graceful at all times.

  • The Plum Girl says:

    Thank you for all your wonderful comments! As you might have felt, I have a travel itch in times of self isolation – this is what this exceptional perfume helped me to soothe. Perfumes have the ability to take you places…make inner journeys possible …And yes, AudeskoI – I’ve been to Mojave desert and it is beautiful! What I loved about Al Sahra – the fragrance, is a very different and creative approach to a well known and popular theme, resulting in a fine perfume. Sending love, take care and #sprayathome

  • I loved the beautiful description of the scent – “desert rose made of salt and rock, transparent spice, dry incense, and beautiful cistus and sandalwood seal of sensuality”. It sound so beautiful, but mostly I loved the “Contact” reference. I live in Romania.

  • patrick_348 says:

    I loved Elena’s description of her personal connection to the Sahara desert and how that makes this fragrance meaningful for her. Her description of the notes is tantalizing. I find it challenging to imagine the combination she describes of rose with mineral, metallic, and woody notes, but it makes me want to smell it all the more. I am in the US in North Carolina.

  • The Plum Girl says:

    Hi again! I just felt the need to add something: when I say “desert rose” – I’m not reffering to rose but to petrified sand resembling a flower, so callled “stone rose”, “crystal rose” as you can see it on one of the photos, the one with the sample

  • diegopineda says:

    For me this “Al Sahra opens like Fleur de sel, a salt that forms a delicate crust on the surface of seawater as it evaporates – mineral and cold like early mornings in the desert, just before the sunrise. That crisp quality is deeply sensual at the same time, a sharp metallic breath inhaled, the one that awakes all your senses at once.” is the most vivid sentence from the review.

    From GA, USA

  • A scent that resembles a desert?! This sounds like my cup of tea! Currently I own one perfume that was inspired by sand dunes and I absolutely love it! Therefore I would really like to try this one and have a bottle in my collection!
    Lina, EU, Lithuania

  • What appeals to me about Al Sahara is the fact that its a modern take on that ancient scents. I really want to smell this scent. Thanks for the draw. I live in CA USA.

  • Camille Sheil says:

    One of the most unique experiences in my childhood was being able to see the sunrise in Death Valley on Easter Sunday. Lovely! I love the power, the quiet, and the smell of the dessert! This article brought so much of that back for me! Having a salty note in a fragrance sounds very refreshing in a world of so much sugar….like a lovely silence in a world of so much hustle and bustle. Beautiful! Thanks for this opportunity! I live in New Hampshire USA.

  • Enjoyed the review. Havent got the chance to try anything from this House. I like that this is different, modern and ancient at the same time. Thanks, Ca

  • Already the name of this fragrance takes you very far, a curious interpretation of the desert, full of mystery and which takes me back to the oriental stories ….. it’s nice to be a child again
    Linda – UE

  • bigscoundrel says:

    Al Sahra sounds like a wonderful modern rose fragrance. I’m very interested in the blend of salty, slightly spicy, incense and sandalwood mixing with the rose. New Jersey, USA.

  • Margarita K says:

    The smell of the desert is a tall order for a perfumer. There is a wast openness and emptiness that one need to define. Should it be “solar” sent?
    Is it possible to express the warmth of the sand? In places where there is no life (or some kind of change in organic matter as a condition for smell development), I think the desert wind, as Elena suggest, is the best way to go. Longing for life, far away.
    I’d love to try Al Sahra, thank you for the opportunity. I live in USA.

  • redwheelbarrow says:

    What a lovely review. I have never been to a desert and must admit I find them quite intimidating. I also hadn’t thought of the role of salt in the desert and it really sounds like a beautiful addition the notes listed here. Thank you for the draw. I’m in the US.

  • what a fascinating notes list! i collect salt, so this fragrance is a must try, thank you from california

  • The most appealing aspect of this review was the description of how The Different Company lives up to it’s name in taking a unique perspective on the Sahara. I live in the USA.

  • I absolutely loved Elena’s prose and memories of her trip to the desert! I have always wanted to go to the Sahara and now I can via Al Sahra. My favorite line was: “a desert rose made of salt and rock, transparent spice, dry incense, and beautiful cistus and sandalwood seal of sensuality.” Thanks for the draw and I live in the USA!

  • Michael Prince says:

    I think I would enjoy this artistic interpretation of the Sahara Desert. With a unique salty and resinous combo in the opening transitioning to a solid base of patchouli and sandalwood. There are also other floral notes and spices to accentuate the feel of the desert. I am from the USA.

  • Lovely review! Makes me want to visit the desert. Always wanted to go to Morocco. This fragrance sounds quite different.
    FL USA

  • m.r.everything says:

    This was a fantastic and very interesting take on the newly released Al Sahra! I love how Elena describes this and takes us on a fragrant journey through the desert. Al Sahra sounds beautiful, as does most of the scents in The Different Company. I have only ever tried one of their fragrances, and I fell in love at first sniff. I own a bottle of Oud for Love and couldn’t be happier. I am looking to add Oriental Lounge as well as Une Nuit Magnetique to my collection some day soon. Now, thanks to Elena, Al Sahra is on that list as well! Thank you Elena, for the great write-up and for sharing your thoughts on the new one from The Different Company. A big thanks to The Different Company for your generosity and for this amazing opportunity! Thank you, as always, to Michelyn for putting this all together! It is greatly appreciated! Sending comments from Delaware, US. Good luck to all!

  • wildevoodoo says:

    While I agree that this isn’t necessarily what I would have expected from a fragrance called Al Sahra, it sounds better this way than what I was expecting! I love love love cistus labdanum, and the addition of salt, cinnamon, incense, violet, and mineral notes sound like a gorgeous combination, complex without being overwhelming. I really enjoyed the beautiful, lyrical flow of this review (as well as the quotes from Sting and Antoine de Saint-Exupéry) and suddenly have a craving to visit such a desert myself! I am in the US 🙂

  • MissJanners says:

    I loved how you talked about the Sahara as being your first love, and that connection with nature your feel when you are there. I’m not too sure how I would like the salt note, but I was drawn in by this article and I would love to smell the fragrance that inspired it.

    I’m in Canada

  • It is always the best feeling when a fragrance really evokes some specific images in your head and Al Sahra seems to live up to its expectations. I’d love to give it a try. Oud Shamash and Oud for Love are two creations of the house which a enjoyed very much. Sadly, the performance wasn’t that great…

    Best wishes from Germany