L'Interdit Rouge Ultime vs L'Interdit Tubéreuse Noire
Side by side. Scored honestly.
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Side by side
Comparing the originals — price, breadth, listed-note depth.
Opens with a soft, slightly bitter almond that quickly pulls iris forward — cool, powdery, faintly rooty. The heart is where it commits: iris and patchouli lock together into a dark, earthy powder that smells expensive without being fussy. Vanilla and oud deepen the dry-down into something resinous and skin-warm, while musk keeps it close rather than broadcasting. Projection is moderate; sillage lingers as a quietly smoky, sweetened wood trail rather than a loud statement. — Best worn in autumn and winter evenings by anyone who wants dark-gourmand depth without tipping into dessert territory.
The 2024 'Forbidden Flowers' opener for the L'Interdit line — a single-note tuberose study that doubles down on the headiest, most narcotic part of the white-flower spectrum. Tuberose dominates top and heart; orange blossom adds a quieter floral counterweight. The base is where the 'Noire' framing earns its name — patchouli and a coffee CO2 absolute pull the composition into smoky-bitter territory, leaving precious woods and vetiver to anchor the dry-down. Heavier-handed than the base L'Interdit EDP, this reads as evening wear in cool weather rather than office-ready.
How they overlap
L'Interdit Rouge Ultime and L'Interdit Tubéreuse Noire share exactly one note (patchouli). The overlap is real but narrow — most of the wear experience will diverge.
The buying decision
L'Interdit Rouge Ultime is the cheaper original at $98 compared to $165 for L'Interdit Tubéreuse Noire — about 41% less.