Sultan Pasha Attars Ensar Rose Review (Sultan Pasha) + A Rose is a Rose Draw

sultan pasha ensar rose review

 Fong Qi Wei Exploding Roses

A rose is a rose is a rose.

Was she right? Gertrude Stein, was she right when she wrote that “Rose is a rose”; that a rose is a rose? That all is as it seems, that we are what we are? Was she right in assuming that… a rose is a rose?

best rose attars

There’s A River in My Head © Isabelle Menin, 2014

For I have memory not of one but of countless roses. I have the memory of a dewy rose I smelt in a garden by the Atlantic Ocean, surrounded by the dunes and the pine trees in a cold morning of pale spring. I have memory of the roses in my mum’s garden, round and plump, pink and yellow and some there were also white as snow. I remember the roses growing wild in a Balinese garden and the grandiose ones blooming in the Isle of Flowers off the coast of Brittany amidst bursts of laughter and the playful eyes of running children. I remember their scent carried by the saline breeze and the wafts of linden blossoms mingling in their trail.

A rose.

The rose petals falling like garnet teardrops on the white marble floor of the Sheikh Zayed Mosque and the scent of rosewater washing the stone courtyards of the Damascus of old.

A rose is a rose

Velvet white bouquets crowing the statue of the Virgin Mary as it walks through the streets of a dusking Paris.

A rose is a rose is Ensar Rose.

sultan pasha attars ensar rose review

Garden rose by Alexandre Helwani

Think of the last time when basked in a warm sunshine, you stopped by a trail in the forest, by the alley in your garden and buried your nose in a rose flower. Think of your surprise as its scent reached your nose and stirred up your memories. Think of its texture, now, think of its colour. Think of the light as it fell between its petals like drops of rain. Think of how gentle and frail it felt against your skin, against your lip as you grew ever closer to it.

Hang on to its image, let not go of its scent as it grows again in your mind and comes together through your senses.

This is your rose. The sum of all roses, the sum of your memories. This rose that you picture now is not real but in yourself – and if it is for you, then it is true.

 best rose attars

Queen of Flowers by Alexandre Helwani

Ensar Rose A rose is a rose.

Ensar Rose opens on such rose. On a personal rose, an intimate and quiet expression of nature’s frail glory. Wet and crisp with morning dew under a faintly green halo. This rose is a rose, a rose that one smelt in a garden someday. For it is pure, buoyant; its eyelids are shut and yet shine, effortless, true to its very nature of Queen of Flowers.

Sultan Pasha works not in notes nor in tiers but in shades. Ensar Rose depicts a flower as it lives from dusk till dawn, its shadow fleeing from a motionless sun.

Crystal.

The clarity of the opening settles and suddenly you’re no longer scared anymore – to pluck this rose. Vetiver comes forth, aided by a helpful strike of sandalwood, showcasing less of its lactones and more of its dryness. Together they ground the flower petals on your skin, the smear it on your wrist like a chunk of lipstick.

Warmth.

Hot like midday’s sun, vanilla’s sweet animality heralds the coming of ouds in the third part of day. The image of morning is gone – this rose sweats under a yellow sky. Clove-like evanescence of eugenol seeping from rose petals on the verge of wilt, it joins the earthiness of a tuberose untamed.

Crackle.

The ouds come at last once all is consumed. The air grows chill, the dusk draws blue. Ouds come in purple wisps, hushing through the leaves and grassy fields. They are piercing, ashy and ashen, woven on a bed of sandalwood, here still. The rose, proud in her nocturnal mantle, shivers. And so do you. Its perfume has waned and turned into an icicle – a memory.

I know of no harder feat than to write about a rose for there are so many and yet so few. For they are loved as much as they are loathed; praised as much as they’re despised and for all we know of their molecules, we know  not  of their nature. With Ensar Rose Sultan Pasha outdoes the Rule of Rose – that it must appear in every collection yet can hardly surprise – by doing what he does best.

best rose perfumes

Tug of Roses by Alexandre Helwani

Poetry.

Weaving and piecing together materials of such might to recreate, not his rose, but our rose. The rose of each one. The rose of our common yet singular memories. Fondness and melancholy sing their tunes in this meticulous and masterful composition, speaking to the heart of all yet true to the heart of each proving, if ever it was needed that:

A rose is a rose.

Your rose.

Ensar Rose.

Top: rosa alba otto, Persian rose otto, Tahitian  vanilla.

Middle: Haitian vetiver, honey, tuberose absolute, Bulgarian rose absolute.

Base: aged Mysore sandalwood, ambergris, amber, Oud Yunus by Ensar Oud (a very rare Hindi oud).

Alexandre Helwani – Contributor

Sutlan Pasha Ensar Rose

Thanks to Sultan Pasha  we have 1 ml of Ensar Rose for a reader anywhere in the world. You must be a registered reader.  You can register here. To be eligible please leave a comment with what you  you enjoyed about  Alexandre’s review of Sultan Pasha Attars Ensar Rose and where you live. Do You have a favorite  Sultan Pasha Attars perfume. Draw closes March 27, 2020

Follow us on Instagram: @cafleurebon, @theperfumechronicles, @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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55 comments

  • Wow! what an original review ! The structure and the form are similar to that of a poem. The very artistic side of this review doesn’t compromise on the accuracy of the description of the rose.
    Should do more reviews like this !!!

    I don’t have any attars in my collection, would love to try this one.

    -From france

  • “Moses supposed his toeses are roses because
    Moses supposes erroneously” and rightly so, because a rose is a rose, however this review states not all roses are the same roses. Can’t express my curiosity for this one. Marit in the UK

  • “Moses supposed his toeses are roses because
    Moses supposes erroneously” and rightly so, because a rose is a rose, however this review states not all roses are the same roses. Can’t express my curiosity for this one. Marit in the UK

  • Very nice review concept, loved it. I will be more than happy to try this attar. Regards from EU

  • Very nice review concept, loved it. I will be more than happy to try this attar. Regards from EU

  • BostonScentGuy says:

    I loved the poetry! I agree that “a rose is a rose” doesn’t tell the whole story since rose scents can have such different moods and aesthetics. This sounds sumptuous, green, woody, sweet–i love how it sounds as if it captures many different aspects of the rose. I love Sultan Pasha’s Cuir de Russie and Thebes. Thanks for the draw! I’m in the US.

  • Alexandre has created lovely evocative images of the Queen of Flowers. I love roses and rose perfumes and this one sounds incredible. I have never tried an attar, but know that many find Sultan Pasha’s work beautiful. In the US.

  • Gerald Moore says:

    Beautifully written poetic review. Am sure I would love this based on this description . Already a big fan of Sultans work and wear several of his attars, moonlit reverie being my current favourite.

  • polaroidcaesar says:

    Beautifully written review. I liked how it was almost like poetry! Really atmospheric and original introduction of this fragrance. I’m really intrigued to try this now and as a lover of rose I would love to win this attar! I’m located in Taiwan.

  • Dubaiscents says:

    I love the poetry of this review, especially “Ouds come in purple wisps, hushing through the leaves and grassy fields”. I would love to see how Sultan Pasha imagines his rose! Thank you for the chance to try it. I’m in the US.

  • A beautiful write up Alexandre!! Rose is one of my very favorite notes in perfumery, and in nature. A timeless fragrance with multiple facets. Alexander captured that in his descriptions. I’ve never had the pleasure to try any of Sultan Pasha’s work, but I’d be honored to start with something like this. It sounds like a perfect choice to start with!!

  • My Mom’s passion was starting roses from cuttings. I absolutely adore all things rose, especially fragrance. I enjoyed the description of Ensar Rose as a flower that lives from dusk till dawn. Thanks for another great article and generous draw! Mich USA

  • Rose with a faintly green halo sounds lovely. Ouds coming in last piercing through the grassy field notes also intrigued me. Have not tried Sultan Pasha Attars perfume before but would love to sample Ensar Rose. Regards from the USA.

  • Bryant Worley says:

    I appreciated the poetic/romantic nature of the reviewer’s description of this fragrance. It was excellently laid out – “For it is pure, buoyant; its eyelids are shut and yet shine, effortless, true to its very nature of Queen of Flowers”; “Vetiver comes forth, aided by a helpful strike of sandalwood”. And then, there’s all that rose. Ahhhhhhhhhhhh……..

    I live in Waldorf, MD, USA.

  • I have sampled many of Sultan Pasha Attars. I love them all! I love how Alexandre likened the scent layers to different times of day. And, how different each type of rose smells unique.

  • Camille Sheil says:

    I think Alexandre captured perfectly that fine balance between subjective and objective experiences. A rose is a rose based on certain, verifiable facts. But a rose also changes meaning, context, and connection to each person. And there are so many roses! And there are so many people! What a great way to look at it all!! This sounds like the best rose fragrance of all time! The blend, the seamless blending, like one took time to weave the different moods together….captivating! I want to experience that too! I have never experienced any of Sultan Pasha’s Attars before! Thanks so much for this opportunity! I live in New Hampshire USA!

  • Shamrock1313 says:

    Such a wonderful review – so poetic, definitely the correct way to describe the fragrance and the roses.
    Pennsylvania USA

  • Natalia306 says:

    Ensar Rose.

    Top: rosa alba otto, Persian rose otto, Tahitian vanilla.

    Middle: Haitian vetiver, honey, tuberose absolute, Bulgarian rose absolute.

    Base: aged Mysore sandalwood, ambergris, amber, Oud Yunus by Ensar Oud (a very rare Hindi oud).
    A rose is a rose.

    Your rose by Alexandre Helwani amazing review of stunning fragragrance
    Florida

  • I really really love Sultan Pashar’s work. I have been so fortunate to be able to try the initial test kit. This would really make my day! Loved the review! Living in the EU

  • terrific paragraph from “…no harder feat than to write about a rose…” to “…we know not of their nature.” lovely notes list, too. thankful your draw in california

  • Top: rosa alba otto, Persian rose otto, Tahitian vanilla.

    Middle: Haitian vetiver, honey, tuberose absolute, Bulgarian rose absolute.

    Base: aged Mysore sandalwood, ambergris, amber, All the notes sound sumptuous and I have not tried any attars. Thanks from the United Kingdom

  • I love rose and oud combinations intrigued by the basenotes especially. Thanks from the United Kingdom

  • I enjoyed the part of the review where he asked to picture a rose and if it is real or true to you then it is true. This sounds complex and wonderful. I’ve read about numerous Sultan Pasha Attars now here in Cafleurebon but have yet to try any or any other Attar for that matter but if I was to try one I’d want it to be a Sultan Pasha. I live in CT USA. Thanks for the draw.

  • Ensar Rose seems like a rich rose composition with oud as background. I have not tried anything from Sultan Pasha. USA

  • patrick_348 says:

    I liked how this review tries to get at the experience of smelling a complex fragrance. Alexandre is not dealing with how you will impress others by wearing it, but rather with the experiential beauty of inhaling the scent and making associations. Bravo! As a result, the fragrance sounds multi-faceted and deep (and thoroughly unixex, too). I have not tried anything by Sultan Pasha. I live in the US, in North Carolina.

  • Sultan Pasha is straight luxury and I’m a big fan of rose. This must smell incredible. I enjoyed the description of the write-up. I live in the USA and have never owned a Sultan Pasha Attars fragrance.

  • Sultan Pasha is straight luxury and I’m a big fan of rose. This must smell incredible. I enjoyed the description of the write-up. I live in the USA and have never owned a Sultan Pasha Attars fragrance.

  • Exciting and interesting review. Sounds like a rich and delightful scent. I am very interested to try something from Sultan Pasha Attars fragrance. I am in the US

  • I loved the poetic nature of this article Alexandre! Beautiful roses and beautiful smells and fragrance from these amazing plants! I have never tried any Sultan Pasha attars but would love to try this one. Thank you for the beautiful visions. California.

  • I read so many wonderful things about Sultan Pasha’s attars but never had the chance to try any of his wonderful creations.
    I’m a big fan of roses and this sounds incredible. Rose that is crisp and wet under a green halo to then add vanile and finish it with oud. Magnificent
    Hope to win this one!
    I live in the US
    Thanks
    Be safe !

  • So beatiful poetry about rose! Thanks, Alexandre for this beautiful article. I am man but love rose in perfumery. Unfortunately I have never tested and sultan Pasha perfumes.
    Armenia

  • Ensar Rose sounds great. Such a vivid review. It took me back to the times my nose was burried in a rose, which is about every time I see or smell a fragrant rose. Needless to say that I love roses. I also love to wear rose perfumes. I live in EU. Thank you Sultan Pasha and Cafleurebon for this wonderful draw.

  • The archetype of “rose”, captured so beautifully in this review by Alexandre Helwani. A rose is a rose is not a rose. Your rose is different and yet the same. Rose, vetiver, tuberose, oud, sandalwood, amber, ambergris, honey, vanilla – heavenly combination that I would love to try out, and make Ensar rose my own rose. Beautiful review. Thanks for the draw – writing from USA.

  • Thank you for the giveaway. I am extremely intrigued by Sultan Pasha – I would love this opportunity to smell the house and try an attar. Crystal – Warmth – Crackle – great part of the review! Wishing everyone health in these trying times. From Canada.

  • This was truthfully such a BEAUTIFUL review. So poetic, evocative and artistically descriptive. The structure was unique, well done Alexandre. I am thinking the perfume’s composition itself might have inspired the review being presented in such a way. So it must be beautiful and special. I have not yet had the privilege to try any Sultan Pasha attar. I am in the EU.

  • As Alexandre says, it’s never easy to write about a rose perfume: there really are so many of them! So many, but never enough: each one is unique in its beauty or plainness (let’s not forget about those). I honestly can’t imagine what this Sultan Pasha Attars perfume is like, but I know one thing: I love rose scents, so I must try it.
    Haven’t tried any Sultan Pasha Attars before, this one might be the first.
    Russia

  • QuentinMathieu says:

    I’ve been dying to try this house, but unfortunately never came across it. The quality and artistry are from what I’ve heard out of this world. This particular one sounds like a dream. It features some of my all-time favourite notes: rose, vetiver, tuberose, sandalwood and oud! I love Alexandre’s taste and I am already a fan of the perfume chronicles. No need to say more lol. I would be delighted to win this giveaway!
    From Belgium (EU)

  • This review was like a guided meditation for me! I really enjoyed it and I could smell the roses and feel their petals. I’ve never had the opportunity to smell any Sultan Pasha attars but the reviews are always glowing. I hope to get the chance some day. Thanks for the review & the draw. I’m in the US.

  • The heat of the sun lifting the scent of a rose into the warm air is one of my favorite things. I sometimes find it while walking in my neighborhood. I enjoyed Alexandre’s rose that sweats it’s fragrance. Many thank yous for sharing Ensar Rose with CaFleureBon readers. I am in the US and haven’t tried anything from Sultan Pasha Attars.

  • One of the most poetic reviews ive seen ahh the nostalgia from every rose we have smelt in our life. We are what we are after all.
    Thanks for the opportunity Eu, Greece

  • Very intriguing fragrance and what a beautiful inspiration. I love Gertrude Stein’s Sacred Emily. As I read this review, I also thought of Magritte’s painting The Tomb of Wrestlers. I am in the USA.

  • What a lyrical review. It felt almost like poetry rather than prose. Sultan Pasha’s fragrances are magical and I’m sure this one is magical as well. Thank you for a beautiful review and a lovely draw. I’m in the USA

  • I really enjoyed this review. Rose is one of my all-time favorite notes. The description of this as one that “depicts a flower as it lives from dusk till dawn, its shadow fleeing from a motionless sun” captivated me. I’d love to try this. I’m in the US

  • I enjoyed that it was a review in a “different” format and that’s refreshing. Of course Sultan Pasha is very talented and I heard great things about ensar rose. Would love to win it cause I love rosy scents. I am in Germany

  • I love the sum of all the different roses Alexandre mentions, and I especially love his mention of “its shadow fleeing from a motionless sun”.
    My favourite Sultan Pasha Attar is Carnival d’Havana, and I live in France, EU.

  • redwheelbarrow says:

    Beautiful review. Rose is complicated for me as sometimes I feel I need to be surrounded by the scent while at other times I want nothing to do with it. I think your poetic review of rose’s many different natures may touch on this. It is also the scent I think I recognize most. I have no experience with attars but this sounds divine. Thank you for the review and draw. I’m in the US.

  • I had the opportunity to test Ensar Rose a month ago or so (together with other SPA samples). This rose is not something that I had been expecting. It is not loud, sweet jammy rose, neither gothic one. It is as if this rose was breathing. Unexpected feeling I had.
    Very beautiful poetic essay.
    I live in Poland and I’d love to win 1 ml if this amazing attar.

  • Yes, roses always make me think of Stein, too!!!I love roses and poetry. I’m in USA and still haven’t gotten to sniff a Sultan Pasha. I need to fix that. Stat.

  • Alexandre had me at “A rose is a rose is Ensar Rose.” Besides, I love rose, oud and SPA. Fantastic prose as usual. (Bangladesh & UK)

  • Alexandre, merci bien pour avoir l’écrire.

    I ashamedly admit that I have not yet tried any of Sultan’s attars, but Ensar Rose sounds like a magnificent place to start.

    This review is so poetically well written with such palpable descriptions that one will reread it for sheer joy of the prose. From top notes to the very last whiff of the base note, you have kept the reader enthralled and enrobed in the virtues of this attar. A rose is definitely not any rose, by your rose, and my rose, and their roses. You have put into words that which Sultan put into olfaction, and quite beautifully.

    I am in the US.

  • Hikmat Sher Afridi says:

    A wonderful read and while reading the review I also gone in the past. IMO, the best natural rose to smell is a dewy rose. Rose smell is irresistible and is known as a queen of flowers. Presently I am enjoying Sultan Pasha Incense Royale and Inferno, many others of Sultan Pasha attars on the want list including Ensar Rose. Thanks for your generosity. Pakistan

  • wallygator88 says:

    Sultan Pasha’s Attars are the poems of the scent world. I’ve read several reviews about his compositions, but I’ve never had the chance to smell one of his attars.

    I really enjoyed the poetic license with which this review was structured. It made me remember the rose bushes that used to flourish in our garden in India – deep red, pink and white.

    Cheers from WI, USA

  • feelingwomanish says:

    I love how Alexandre walked through all the stages of the attar, breaking down how the scent transforms and evolves on the skin.

    I live in Kansas.

  • MissJanners says:

    As I read this, I started to think of all the different roses I’ve encountered in my life. What good memories. This sounds beautiful.
    I haven’t tried any Sultan Pasha Attars before.
    Love from Canada.