Darren Alan Perfumes Dust and Clay (Darren Alan) 2024 + Mitti and Mystery Giveaway

Darren Alan Dust and Clay

Darren Alan Perfumes Dust and Clay via Darren Alan

He, Zigeuner, greife in die Saiten ein!
Spiel das Lied vom ungetreuen Mägdelein!
Laß die Saiten weinen, klagen, traurig bange,
Bis die heiße Träne netzet diese Wange! ~ Hugo Conrat, whose poetry was immortalized in Johannes Brahms’ song cycle Zigeunerlieder (Gypsy Songs)

(Ho, gypsy! Pluck your strings! Play the song of the unfaithful maiden! Let your strings weep, moan, and be mournful, until hot tears dampen these cheeks! ~ my translation)

Darren Alan of Darren Alan perfumes

Darren Alan of Darren Alan Perfumes courtesy of the perfumer

Artisanal perfumer Darren Alan is a fascinating and multi-faceted individual – a truth which informs his personal aesthetic in the creation of perfume. From early childhood, he developed a love of nature and aroma: his mother cultivated flowers and was a fine cook, while his grandmother nurtured fruit, vegetables, flowers and herbs in her gardens. These women eagerly imparted their knowledge to young Darren, who loved to traipse through the woods in his native Pennsylvania with his younger sister Kimberly. Darren’s entire family is musical and he is no exception, having earned degrees in musical education and vocal performance; he sang tenor roles with the Pittsburgh Opera, taught voice privately, and currently continues to teach middle and high school music and chorus. It was in the 1990s when Darren began to explore aromatherapy and the art of perfumery: most of his fragrances are inspired by both nature and the great classical perfumes, resulting a neo-vintage approach which is painterly and eminently wearable.

This name was disclosed to me by a deceased Romani woman through communication with the Sorceress Cagliastro, Necromancer in the hands of Nine. This gypsy woman used to roam the streets of Scotland and told people’s fortunes through the ancient art of coin divination.” ~ Darren Alan, upon naming his October 2024 Perfume of the Month, Dust and Clay

 

Romani Gypsy by Konstantin Makovsky via wiki

I brook no argument with the perfumer regarding his interpretation of inspiration. I feel a deep affinity with Romani language, literature, and especially their music (it’s likely that I have Roma blood) – so I didn’t require any convincing. When it came to light that Dust and Clay was composed around precious mitti attar, I experienced that telltale frisson and immediately purchased it without a second thought. All these elements are mysteriously interwoven: it is believed that the Roma (sometimes referred to as Gypsy, a classification which may rankle) originated in India’s Rajasthan region centuries ago. Mitti attar is the result of the distillation of fine East Indian sandalwood with clay – an odor which a dear friend once described to me as “the smell of parched earth after the monsoon rains”. Sorceress Cagliastro has served as the vessel through which this fragrance’s name became manifest; my imagination runs wild.

Mitti Attar

Mitti Attar by Darren

Dust and Clay represents the marriage between mitti and mystery. It is clear that this perfume sings of the earth, the arid terrains thirsting for appeasing rain. I love it for its veracity and subtlety: it feels like layers of gossamer veil which are peeled away like onion skin. Tendrils of delicate ionones (violet, orris) breathe an untroubled coolness into the woodsy comfort punctuated by sandalwood, cedar, guaiacwood, and incense; the dry floral spice of black pepper and allspice provide seasoning for this earthy pleasure. Wormwood contributes a lively, soft camphorous sweetness which lifts the other elements with its naturally herbal voice; if you partake of absinthe, you are familiar with its distinctive personality. One spray never suffices, because you want to experience all the stages of Dust and Clay’s development repeatedly, immerse yourself in its elegant, primal charm. As is often the case with intriguing perfumes, it treads the tightrope which unites the sacred and the profane gingerly, with seductive hesitation. It is this barefooted, noiseless tread which lingers – the traces of mankind upon sun-baked loamy soil.

Notes: wormwood, allspice, black pepper, violet, mitti attar, guaiacwood, orris root, cedar, incense smoke

I purchased my flacon of Darren Alan Perfumes Dust and Clay, opinions my own.

~ Ida Meister, Deputy and Natural Perfumery Editor

 

Dust and Clay by Darren Alan Perfumes

Darren Alan Perfumes Dust and Clay

Thanks to the generosity of Darren Alan we have a 10 ml flacon of Dust and Clay for one registered ÇaFleureBon reader USA ONLY, (if you are not sure if you are registered click here – you must register on our site or your entry will be invalid). To be eligible please leave a comment about what piques your interest about Dust and Clay in Ida’s review. Draw closes 11/2/2024

Note: Darren Alan Perfumes Dust and Clay is from his October perfume of the month club, which is a subscription-based service and sold out quickly. He made a new batch for this article.

Rachel K. Ng review of Darren Alan’s vintage style Chypre No 1 here, her review of Vintage Novel here, Honeysuckle Summer here, Musc Moderne, Aqua di Colonia, and Dorian’s Fougère here.

Follow us on Instagram @cafleurebonoffical @idameister @darren_alan_perfumes

Editor’s Note: Darren Alan Perfumes Jonquille was chosen as a top 10 perfume of 2023 by Senior Contributor Rachel K. Ng

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Darren Alan Perfume collection is available at Fragrance Vault.

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13 comments

  • madamepeace says:

    That description of parched earth made me swoon. I love earthy scents so much, and especially the smell of petrichor-esque things, on cement, or grass, or dried earth. It is all so different and all equally beautiful. I love perfume so much and how it brings nature to mind in the hustle and bustle of busy life! From Portland, USA.

  • I received this as a member od Darren’s perfume of the month subscription and I absolutely love it. Ida’s description of it wearing like layers of gossamer is spot on. It’s one of those fragrances that is undeniably present, but wears like a veil. The scent matches the description of an arid and sun-scorched landscape perfectly, however it is nowhere near as dense and heavy as it may sound. It’s incredibly unique and brings about imagery of dancing fireside in a barren desert. If you happen to chose my comment, please pick someone else as I already own it. Best of luck to everyone.

  • The Romani angle and the blended notes really get my attention. While not related to Roma in any way, the culture has always intrigued me. The mysterious unfolding of notes described here sound amazing!

  • Eris.can.swatch.kaos says:

    I am so excited to be tuned into great creations thanks to the perfume of the month club. I’ll have to wait to start in the new year, but it will be so fun! Dust & Clay sounds so interesting and sexy. I’m unfamiliar with the scent of mitti attar but can imagine it. Would love to win this limited fragrance. I live in Oregon.

  • Ida paints such a beautiful picture of this scent, I would love to try it! This certainly sounds like a fragrance with a personality all its own. Plus I’m such a sucker for fragrances with a dusty, earthy element. Thanks for the review!
    -NY USA

  • From googling about, “Mitti means “earth,” and mitti attar loosely translates to the smell of rain-soaked earth.” GASP. Attar is all natural versus perfume, which has chemicals. I’m okay with chemicals but curious about the performance of naturals. Dust and Clay adds a nice blend of spices to flowers, woods and incense smoke. Sounds 100% fab, especially for the colder days ahead. I live in NY.

  • Darren has quite a variety of talent. He must be a busy guy. I think Darren might have a future in writing a fantasy novel. The mitti attar interests me, I haven’t seen this note before. The distillation is very interesting. I have only experienced monsoon rains in Santa Fe, I am curious how it compares. I love Darren’s Musc Moderne! Thanks for the chance. USA.

  • Thank you Ida for this wonderful review of Dust and Clay. I am going to check out Darren’s perfume of the month club because it sounds like he’s a very talented perfumer.
    Also the neo vintage style as well as his musical background appeals to me.
    USA

  • I absolutely looove mitti attar and am always excited to see a perfume or attar with it. It’s incredible. Romani definitely originate from India. The language proves it. So many words are similar and the structure of the language. Even though we picked up borrow words from Greece, Persia, Turkey, Middle East it’s overall an Indus Valley language. I remember watching the film Latcho Drom and the opening scene I understood what they were saying! The word for water is the same etc.
    Anyways I’m excited to try this. Thank you for the generous giveaway.
    U.S.

  • Oh this sounds just lovely. I am always on the search for scents that would allow me to create that petrichor scene on command, so maybe this is the one. I have not heard of mitti attar, so thank you for introducing me to it. I would love to try this, and am in the US. Thank you for the lovely review and the draw.

  • Mitti attar is a material I haven’t had a chance to experience in person, but that “smell of parched earth after the monsoon rains” description is so evocative, I think I have a strong sense of it. The way Darren interpreted it here is deft—layers of dry spice, woods, and cool florals over the attar and smoky incense. The addition of herbal-sweet Wormwood is a surprise and I’m intrigued by the way Ida describes it’s impact on the other elements of Dust and Clay. I’d love to try this.

    I’m in the USA.

  • This commentary vividly captures the intricate inspirations behind Darren Alan’s “Dust and Clay” perfume. Starting with Hugo Conrat’s verse that evokes a Romani spirit, it seamlessly connects to Alan’s own background in music, nature, and mysticism. The use of mitti attar—a blend of sandalwood and earth evoking “parched earth after monsoon rains”—roots the fragrance in a sense of timeless, earthy allure. Alan’s “neo-vintage” style is described as almost ceremonial, inviting wearers into an olfactory experience where the sacred and profane mingle. The writing itself feels like a poetic journey, revealing the perfume’s earthy, mystical charm.

    Malta.

  • wallygator88 says:

    Dust and Clay by Darren Alan Perfumes is a captivating fragrance that masterfully blends earthy and elegant notes. It opens with intriguing top notes of wormwood, allspice, and black pepper, which give way to a heart of Mitti Attar and violet. The Mitti Attar, a unique co-distillation of East Indian Sandalwood and broken clay pots, provides a dry, dusty, and earthy aroma that beautifully complements the violet. The base notes of guaiacwood, orris root, cedar, and incense smoke add depth and longevity to the scent.

    As a perfume user, I find Dust and Clay to be a sophisticated and versatile fragrance that evokes a sense of ancient mysticism and natural beauty. It is perfect for those who appreciate a complex, multi-dimensional scent that lingers gracefully throughout the day.