Noir Extreme vs Tobacco Vanille
Side by side. Scored honestly.
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Side by side
Comparing the originals — price, breadth, listed-note depth.
Cardamom hits first — sharp, almost medicinal — then saffron pulls it warmer and slightly leathery within minutes. The heart is where it gets interesting: kulfi (a creamy, pistachio-tinged sweetness) softens the spice without turning it candied, and sandalwood starts building a smooth, woody base underneath. The dry-down is long, amber-heavy, and genuinely rich, with vanilla giving it a skin-close warmth that lingers for hours. Projection is serious — this announces itself in a room — with sillage that trails well past your exit — Cold-weather evenings, date nights, anyone who wants to be noticed without saying a word.
Opens with a burst of warm, slightly bitter tobacco leaf cut through with baking spices, then settles quickly into its real identity: a dense, almost edible heart of vanilla and tonka bean wrapped around sweet tobacco blossom and a whisper of cocoa. The dry-down is smooth and relentless, staying close to the skin but leaving a heavy, honeyed sillage that reads in any room. Projection is generous without being aggressive — this wears like an expensive dessert you're not sharing — Deep fall and winter evenings, anyone who wants to smell unmistakably present.
How they overlap
Noir Extreme and Tobacco Vanille share exactly one note (vanilla). The overlap is real but narrow — most of the wear experience will diverge.
The buying decision
Noir Extreme is the cheaper original at $230 compared to $395 for Tobacco Vanille — about 42% less. Both wear best across the same fall/winter — they're interchangeable on weather fit.
Recommendation
If you're price-sensitive, Noir Extreme delivers comparable territory at $165 less than Tobacco Vanille. If you want the specific character of Tobacco Vanille — the prose above is the better guide than the price — the premium is what you're paying for.