Aether Arts Perfume Gunsmoke & Roses Review (Amber Jobin) + Wanted: Dead or Alive Draw

Aether Arts Perfume Gunsmoke & Roses Review

Tim Blake Nelson in the Ballad of Buster Scruggs, 2018

Two lonely figures on horseback in a deep valley are sauntering like they’ve got all the time in the world. Dust kicks from hoofprints, and he’s singing loudly as he rides underneath a vast expanse of never-ending sky. In the dying sun, he calls his name off the mountains and it echoes over and over like an oft-repeated joke. Rifle slung over her shoulder, pistol holstered, she laughs and swigs from the canteen, grinning at the trees and shaking her head. The smell of camp nearby; woodsmoke and parched earth. As they dismount, he reaches into his worn, leathery satchel and pulls a flower, half wilted now, and puts it behind her ear. The red satin smell of rose mixes with the metallic tang of gun oil. This is Colorado country, circa sometime, and the fragrance is Aether Arts Perfume Gunsmoke & Roses.

Aether Arts gunsmoke & Roses review

Solange Knowles by Tim Walker

Described by Aether Arts Perfume founder and perfumer Amber Jobin as a masculine floral, Gunsmoke & Roses must have been what the spiffy gunslinger Buster Scruggs sported as he warbled his way into frontier towns. But it would work for Annie Oakley, too. The fragrance barrels out of the bottle like newly fired pistol with a combination of biting rifle smoke and warm, waxy carnation, the smell of melting candles, milky flowers, a touch of chili and clove. Sidling up right behind is a whiff of gun oil and leather. Jobin’s choice of choya ral, with its facets of old leather and dry wood, works brilliantly to give the impression of worn saddle and smoke as Gunsmoke & Roses moseys along.

Now quit playin’ and put that pistol away. The flowers got work to do The carnation opens up, all spicy and sweet. But just as its smouldering into the gun smoke, it gets walloped by a butch punch of Texas cedar as big as all outdoors. There’s some dirt kicking around from patchouli, and the fragrance goes all John Wayne for a few minutes.

Aether Arts Gunsmoke & Roses review

Photo by Catherine MacNeil

But aw shucks, if this ain’t got just the sweetest little rosy heart hidin’ ‘neath all that desperado swagger. The middle section gives way to a jaunty rag played on a tinny piano in the saloon. The ladies upstairs are beckoning, and the heady, juicy fragrance of just-plucked rose wafts from the landing. At the same time, the gunsmoke recedes into firewood, the carnation embraces the rose in a slow waltz, and everything gets a bit more genteel.

best aether arts perfume

Stock photo

As Gunsmoke & Roses dries down, worn leather and flowers mingle quietly and each comes forward again to remind you it hasn’t made its last stand: wax and carnation, smoky rose, gun oil, cedar all hang together and separately like a chain of paper dolls. Atmospheric, accessible and really quite lovely, Aether Arts Gunsmoke & Roses is one of my favourite Amber Jobin creations.

I reckon it just about makes a person want to ride off into the sunset.

Notes: Juniper berry, rose, carnation, gun powder, gun oil, Texas cedar, choya ral, birch tar, patchouli.

Disclaimer: Gunsmoke & Roses sample kindly provided by Aether Arts Perfume. My opinions are my own.

Lauryn Beer, Senior Editor

Amber Jobin winning the art and Olfaction award

Editor’s Note: Amber Jobin is a multi award winning perfumer and received an Art and Olfaction Award in the Artisan category for Burner 4: John Frum

Amber Jobin for Aether Arts Perfume Gunsmoke & roses

Image by Aether Arts

Thanks to the generosity of Aether Arts Perfume, we have a 2 ml rollerball of Gunsmoke & Roses for one registered reader worldwide. To be eligible, please leave a comment saying what appeals to you about Aether Arts Perfume Gunsmoke & Roses based on Lauryn’s review, where you live and what Wild West figure you would like to see inspire a perfume. Draw closes 2/6/2020.

This is our Privacy and Draw Rules Policy.

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27 comments

  • This one calls my name. A masculine floral sprinkled with gunpowder and gun oil? This would be great to even just sniff once, cause I can’t really imagine it. I see Buffalo Bill inspire a perfume with a boozy tobacco herbal edge. I am from the EU.

  • This is Clint Eastwood to a T. It sounds wicked good. Gun oil? Gun powder? Wild! Wild! West! Sign me up! Commenting from Kentucky USA.

  • Very nice review of an intriguing fragrance featuring rose, and notes of gun powder and oil! I would love for someone to dedicate a fragrance to Annie Oakley. Maybe with davana and jasmine. In the USA.

  • Gunpowder floral that’s accessible? I’m super curious. I live in TN USA and would love to see Yosemite Sam get a fragrance.

  • Didn’t know you can put gun powder and gun oil into a fragrance! Add on to that the dry leather and roses, alongside the Wild West photos…all of this makes Gunsmoke & Roses a very promising scent! Would like to see a Clint Eastwood-inspired perfume. Regards from Boston USA.

  • Omg I was just talking with a friend about how she would love for her boyfriend to wear cologne and he doesn’t get it, and another person chimed in that he probably would if bike oil was a note in it!

    This review definitely caught my eye because of this conversation and made me wonder if that metal/oil combo in this creation would appeal to him. I’d love to smell something so unique! In Canada.

  • Gabriel Garcia Leyva says:

    Interesting description of the wild west, and those notes, are amazing to me, the smell of gun and gunpowder under the blazing sunset, it sounds like a john huston movie, my favorite actor will be Gary Cooper.
    Las Vegas NV USA

  • This sounds so intriguing! Like a wild yet warm scent, violent but also velvety. I would love to discover such an unusual combination of flowers, gunpowder and leather. Sounds perfectly unisex too. I must confess I do not have much knowledge about wild west characters, but it would be interesting to smell a female “damsel in distress” interpretation (not the prissy type though, but the one who gets to shoot and kick a couple of times too). Maybe a combination of white florals and smoke/gunpowder/dusty notes this time? I am from the EU, thanks for the draw.

  • What appeals to me about Gunsmoke and Roses is how it starts out with a bang and morphs into a more subdued character later. Waxy carnations into roses, gunsmoke and gun oil into firewood. I like a fragrance that changes and keeps things interesting. Very unique notes. I’d love to wear this for a few days to see just what gun oil and gunsmoke and tinny pianos and used saddles smells like in a fragrance. This is leaning masculine and I’m a female but it still interests me for myself. I am in WI, USA. A wild west figure I’d like to see a fragrance built for is Belle Starr, a lady know for her classy ways, but with a hand in the outlaw side of things.

  • Juniper berry, rose, carnation, gun powder, gun oil, Texas cedar, choya ral, birch tar, patchouli all the notes sound sumptuous. Thank you from United Kingdom

  • Loving the notes gun oil, gun powder, patchouli, rose, birch tar and choya ral. Thank you from United Kingdom

  • patrick_348 says:

    I like that this is not too solemn or serious. It sounds like there is a playfulness about it. I like the idea of a floral that gets complemented by less pretty notes. I live in the US, in North Carolina, and would like to see a perfume inspired by Billy the Kid, but I am not sure what he would smell like.

  • wallygator88 says:

    Thanks for the excellent review Lauryn.
    This scent sounds like it would be a fairly polarizing wear, something that I personally enjoy :D.
    I love the portrait that your review paints, it sets the tone for this fragrance.

    Location: WI, USA

    Regards

  • Im really interested in this fragrance, it sounds incredibly unique. The birch tar note appeals to me. I live in Washington State. I’d love to see the ranger from Big Iron by Marty Robbins inspire a perfume!

  • Shamrock1313 says:

    Now this sounds intriguing for sure – masculine rose frags aren’t that common imo – the gun powder & leather just sounds wonderful.
    Great information by Lauryn.
    Pennsylvania USA

  • Bryant Worley says:

    What appeals to me about Aether Arts Perfume Gunsmoke & Roses is my anticipation for what gun smoke and Rose’s will smell like, as I like Rose and smoke in fragrance. I live in Waldorf, Maryland, and would like to see “Doc” Holliday inspire a fragrance, as it would have to full of attention-grabbing swagger. Or Black Bart (just because the name would conjure up a dark, animalic fragrance).]

  • Thank you, Lauryn for this absolutely fantastic review! Thank you to Amber and Team Aether Arts for the generosity of the draw.

    I really, really love dark, oily, smokey, “not your typical perfume notes” fragrances. The idea of gun powder and gun oil along with the florals, woody notes and smoke sound like absolute heaven to me.

    Lauryn, you did a phenomenal job writing this, pardner! Very witty and entertaining while at the same point getting the true feel of the perfume across.

    I’m from MA, USA

  • This sounds so intriguing! I would love to smell gun powder and gun oil in a perfume. I am from the EU.

  • This review was entertaining. I’m from the south so Gunsmoke and Roses sounds like normal life around here. It initially took me to my childhood and then to a time when my children were teens. Funny how scents (and now even the description of them) can carry you back to a memory. The notes are familiar to our life.
    This one needs to live at my house. USA

  • bigscoundrel says:

    This sounds like one of the manliest fragrances ever created. If I don’t win this one, I will buy some. If I win this, I will buy some more. I would like to see a perfume based on Geronimo or Wyatt Earp. New Jersey, USA.

  • m.r.everything says:

    This is a very interesting fragrance review and an even more interesting fragrance…. that I have not smelled but can only imagine what it does smell like! This has some crazy notes thrown in with some pretty common ones that make this sound so enticing and weird at the same time. With that being said, I love the smell of gun powder and gun oil… both of which I have smelled on many occasions! It is something like people who like the smell of gasoline… (myself being one of them) it is weird but you can’t stop smelling it! The gun powder and the oil mixed with the florals, smoky rose, and leather all sound out of this world! Surely one that deserves a sniff…. or two! He was mentioned already, but I would like to see “Doc” Holliday inspiring a fragrance. that could go so many different ways with a medicinal/herbal gun powder and western oriented smell! That would be great! Thank you Lauryn, for the fantastic western write-up! This was definitely an enjoyable read! Thank you for bringing this scent to light, as it has those “fantasy” notes and I love those kind of fragrances! They are some of the best, in my opinion! Thank you to Aether Arts Perfume as well for this generous and exciting opportunity! Thank you, as always, to Michelyn, for putting this all together and keeping us in the loop with the latest fragrances on CaFleureBon! It is greatly appreciated! Sending a bang from Delaware, US. Good luck to all on this “DRAW”…. (see what happened there… “DRAW” your guns, okay, I will stop, haha!)

  • A deliberate masculine floral is most interesting. Thanks for a great review and draw. I’m in the USA

  • Love how you’re shootin’ straight with us cowpoke about this here deeliteful smellin’ bottle of pure untamed wild west. I live NYC

  • This would shoot me out of my comfort zone with regards to perfumes and I’m rather intrigued to sample a fragrance with gunpowder/gun oil notes. I’d go with Geronimo for a wild west figure inspiring a fragrance – I’d imagine it to have leather, tobacco and wood accords. I’m in USA

  • I would love to see a fragrance inspired by Phoebe Anne Naylor (played by Rosemary Forsythe) in Texas Across the River- a rich and sheltered lady who flees to a rough Texas frontier town in order to meet her fiancé (where predictable hilarity ensues). I’ll bet she brought her favourite perfume with her and wore it in the dust and mud and the through the gun fights and bar brawls!

    I love both the smell of gun oil and roses (separately) and I am so intrigued at the thought of them together!

    Writing from Canada.

  • Rose is my fave note. Mixed with gun oil sounds badass. I’d like to see a fragrance inspired by the cow ponies of the old west. The horses that made the cowboys. I’m in USA.

  • This composition sounds interesting. Curious to find out how it develops on the skin.
    Creative composition.
    Ky,USA