




Liquid Brun Limited Edition Decant | 5/10/20 ML
Not sure which size? Start with 10ml — enough for 10–15 full wears to know if you love it before buying the bottle.
Top: Bergamot · Cardamom · Cinnamon · Orange Blossom
Heart: Elemi · Bourbon Vanilla
Base: Praline · Ambroxan · Guaiacwood · Musk
🏆 A warm spiced opening of bergamot, cardamom and cinnamon anchors a rich bourbon-vanilla heart before praline and ambroxan carry it 10–12+ hours into the dry-down — Extrait-level performance that one reviewer called "bold, long-lasting, very smooth — I didn't need to reapply once all day." The Limited Edition formula is the upgraded version of the standard Liquid Brun EDP: more potent, heavier praline, and — in the community's near-unanimous verdict — noticeably more authentic and longer-lasting than its predecessor.
🏆 French Avenue is a Dubai-based house distributed under the Fragrance World / FA Paris umbrella, known for high-end impressions of niche pillars. Liquid Brun Limited Edition sits squarely in the DNA of Parfums de Marly Althaïr (~$290–$400 at retail) — reviewers consistently call it a "direct, ~90–95% impression" in the air and very similar on skin. Where Althaïr leans slightly more woody-oriental with layered complexity in the dry-down, the LE version leans heavier on praline sweetness, making it a more overtly gourmand read of the same blueprint. Marketed as a "first batch, last batch" collector release.
🔍 Every French Avenue bottle in the Aromatick catalog is sourced as a factory-sealed full bottle, hand-decanted in-house into sterile atomizers, sealed and labeled before it ships to you. You're getting authentic juice from an unopened source bottle — same formula, fraction of the price of the full 150ml.
💸 The full 150ml LE retails for ~$45–$50. The niche original it's inspired by — Parfums de Marly Althaïr — runs $290–$400. This decant starts at $6.99 for 5ml: the affordable way to wear an Althaïr-tier experience without either commitment. Ideal for collectors who want the gourmand-spice DNA in the rotation without the niche price tag, and for anyone curious whether the LE upgrade is worth tracking down.
⚡ Autumn and winter primary; evening year-round; not recommended in hot summer (heavy gourmand-spice reads cloying in heat). Best occasions: evening, formal/special, date night, cool-weather signature wear. Longevity 10–12+ hours (Extrait formula); strong projection first 2–4 hours settling to a moderate trail; above-average sillage — noticeable but not room-filling. Apply 2–3 sprays to pulse points. One honest trade-off: a polarizing minority find the praline dominates mid-dry-down to the point of smelling "like chewing gum" — if heavy gourmand sweetness isn't your register, sample before committing.
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Longevity, skin chemistry, the collector's take, and how we authenticate.
French Avenue is a Dubai-based perfume house operating under the Fragrance World / FA Paris distribution umbrella — a group that has spent years producing high-fidelity impressions of niche reference points at a fraction of the original's price. Liquid Brun Limited Edition is their 2025 Extrait de Parfum upgrade to the standard Liquid Brun EDP, released as a collector "first batch, last batch" limited run. The brief, executed with precision: take the Parfums de Marly Althaïr blueprint — one of the more beloved masculine gourmand-oriental releases in recent niche memory — and push it into Extrait territory with heavier concentration and a more pronounced praline character.
The Althaïr comparison is the obvious place to start because it's where virtually every reviewer starts: the community consensus lands at a ~90–95% accuracy impression in the air and very similar on skin. "Smells identical to Althaïr in the air and very similar on skin with massive performance — maybe the most accurate clone I've smelled" is the advocacy verdict that the broader community keeps corroborating. The honest qualifier: Althaïr is slightly more woody-oriental with layered complexity in the dry-down, while the Liquid Brun LE leans heavier on praline-sweetness throughout wear. The LE is the more overtly gourmand of the two; Althaïr is the more architecturally complex. Neither is strictly better — they're the same blueprint with different emphases, and at the $45–$50 full-bottle retail versus $290–$400 for the Parfums de Marly, the math is difficult to argue with.
The LE upgrade over the standard Liquid Brun EDP is real and documented by reviewers who own both. "The Limited Edition feels noticeably higher quality, more potent and more authentic than the standard EDP" is the consistent framing — the Extrait concentration delivers 10–12+ hours where the EDP clocks 6–8, and the composition reads more polished and sophisticated at this concentration level. "The cinnamon-cardamom opening, then a vanilla heart with real sophistication — gourmand but never cheap-smelling" describes what the LE achieves that cheaper gourmands don't. The one caveat worth naming honestly: a minority of wearers find the praline tips into synthetic-sweet territory by the mid-dry-down. The 5ml decant is the correct first step.
Who should reach for this: anyone who has coveted Althaïr but balked at the niche price tag; collectors who want a strong autumn-winter evening signature in the gourmand-oriental space; anyone testing whether heavy praline-ambroxan-spice is their register before investing in the full bottle. At $6.99 for 5ml, this is a decision that costs less than a coffee.
🔺 The Scent Pyramid
Top Notes (0–20 min)
Bergamot · Cardamom · Cinnamon · Orange Blossom
The opening is warm and spiced with real brightness — bergamot and orange blossom provide a fresh-floral lift that keeps cardamom and cinnamon from reading as purely bakery. The cinnamon is dry and slightly sharp rather than sweet; the cardamom brings that distinctive aromatic-green spice depth. Together they establish the fragrance's signature warmth before the vanilla heart takes over. "The cinnamon-cardamom opening" is the chapter reviewers most often call out as the hook.
Heart Notes (20 min–2 hrs)
Elemi · Bourbon Vanilla
Elemi — a resinous, slightly citrus-camphoraceous gum resin — bridges the spiced opening into the vanilla heart, adding a faintly smoky, aromatic texture that prevents the vanilla from landing as pure confection. Bourbon vanilla here is warm, rich, and slightly creamy — not sharp synthetic vanilla, but the rounded, complex vanilla that sits adjacent to the spice without competing with it. This is the chapter where the composition reveals its sophistication: "gourmand but never cheap-smelling" is the accurate read of a well-integrated vanilla heart.
Base Notes (2 hrs through dry-down)
Praline · Ambroxan · Guaiacwood · Musk
The base is where the LE diverges most clearly from Althaïr's slightly more woody-oriental dry-down. Praline arrives as the dominant base character — sweet, nutty, caramel-adjacent — and this is the note that the composition's performance controversy centers on. Ambroxan provides the radiant, skin-bonded warmth that drives the 10–12+ hour longevity. Guaiacwood adds dry, slightly smoky woody structure that tempers the sweetness. Musk provides soft depth and a clean finish. The four together produce what the majority of reviewers experience as a rich, warm, polished gourmand base — and what a minority experience as over-sweet.
What it smells like on skin:
The spiced-citrus opening arrives immediately and projects confidently — cinnamon and cardamom forward, bergamot lifting the whole thing so it doesn't read as purely baked-goods. By the 20-30 minute mark, elemi and bourbon vanilla emerge and the fragrance shifts from spiced-bright to warm-rich. The praline base announces itself in the first hour and amplifies as the top burns off — this is when you'll know which camp you fall into. For most wearers, it settles into a smooth, sophisticated gourmand warmth with real ambroxan radiance driving all-day staying power. Strong projection through the first few hours, then a consistent moderate trail that just keeps going.
Performance & Wear Guide
- Longevity: 10–12+ hours on skin — Extrait de Parfum concentration delivers a meaningful step up over the standard Liquid Brun EDP's 6–8 hour range. Multiple reviewers confirm all-day wear without reapplication. Performance is one of the LE's clearest upgrades over the base version.
- Projection: Strong for the first 2–4 hours — the spiced-gourmand-ambroxan combination pushes the composition into your immediate space early in wear. Settles to a moderate, close-to-moderate trail through the back half. Not a room-announcer past the opening phase.
- Sillage: Above-average — French Avenue markets the LE as "Sillage Puissant" (powerful sillage), and the community largely corroborates this in the opening hours. Noticeable but not room-filling; you'll leave a trail without overwhelming the people around you.
- Season: Autumn and winter primary. The heavy praline-spice-ambroxan character reads rich and enveloping in cool weather but can feel cloying in heat. Evening wear is appropriate year-round in temperature-controlled settings; not recommended for hot summer outdoor wear.
- Occasion: Evening, formal/special occasion, date night, cool-weather signature. The Extrait concentration and gourmand density make this a deliberate wear — it rewards occasions where you want to be noticed rather than blending into the background.
- Application: 2–3 sprays to pulse points. The Extrait concentration means less is more — the opening projection is already strong, and layering additional sprays in the opening hour can tip the praline into overwhelming territory.
- Trade-off / polarization: A minority of wearers find the praline overwhelms the composition by mid-dry-down — "smells like chewing gum" is the dissent framing. If heavy gourmand sweetness isn't your preferred register, the 5ml decant exists exactly for this reason: sample before committing.
Performance varies with skin chemistry — skin that runs warm or dry may amplify the praline-sweetness earlier than average. Apply to pulse points and allow the first 30 minutes to let the spiced opening settle before assessing fit.
Every French Avenue bottle at Aromatick is sourced as a factory-sealed full bottle from authorized distributors. We hand-fill each decant into sterile atomizers in-house, then seal and label every unit before it ships — authentic juice, nothing repackaged or refilled from secondary sources.
Questions about sourcing or authenticity? We're happy to talk through it — contact us anytime.
— Rodney Gallagher, founder, Aromatick.com




