SHL 777 Taklamakan: Desert Sands, Desert Gold

The golden dunes and shifting sands of the Taklamakan are an appropriate setting for Stéphane Humbert Lucas‘ upcoming perfume by the same name. Taklamakan is the name of the world’s second largest shifting sand desert, composed primarily of large, striking sand dunes. It is also China’s largest desert, located in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, and a part of the ancient Silk Road trade route that helped to spread spices from China to Persia, Greece, Rome, and beyond. Spices, scorched sands, dryness, and golden warmth are very much a part of Taklamakan, the perfume, but there were other things that struck me about choice of a desert name.

Taklamakan near Xian, China. Source: nationalgeographic.com.es

The Taklamakan, China. Source: nationalgeographic.com.es

One of the things I love in life is photography, of all kinds, be it landscape photography or high fashion editorials. But I’m particularly fond of nature photography that takes on a wholly abstract quality that emphasizes colours, shapes, movement, and fluidity. I can lose myself in such images for hours, falling into a sort of photographic or Pinterest black hole similar to the “Wikipedia black hole” that people joke about, as I follow one set of photos to another, entranced by their beauty and the escapist joy of indirectly “travelling” to far-flung, exotic places. A while back, I got lost in Pinterest boards called “Desert/Sands” and “Deserts & Dunes,” the latter focusing primarily on the different colours of the sand and the formations created by the wind. I was fascinated by the lines, structures, shapes, twisting and turning, shifting, moving, curving, weaving about — all in shades of gold, red, cream, ochre, burnt umber, terracotta, grey, brown….

Antelope Canyon, Photo by Mike Irwin on Fine Art America. (Direct website link embedded within.)

Antelope Canyon, photo by Mike Irwin on Fine Art America. (Direct website link embedded within.)

Taklamakan, the perfume, has those exact same colours, movement, feel, visuals, and texture on my skin. It’s one of a mere handful of fragrances that, somehow, manages to evokes the textural feel of hot, dry sand and dust, which is rather a masterful feat if you ask me. In addition, it does so through notes that, for me, at least, visually replicate the colour schemes of so many gorgeous desert photos I’ve seen.

Deserts are rather uncomplicated things if you think about it, easily summarized as nothing more than sand that goes on for miles, and, on one level, Taklamakan is really a very simple, uncomplicated fragrance as well. Depending on occasion or test, its fundamental character on my skin can be boiled down to:

  • a dry-sweet woody-vanilla laced with sugared caramel, spicy patchouli, amber, dust, sand, and smoke;
  • a dry, sandy, spicy, ambered patchouli layered with sugary vanilla, caramel, nutty sweet myrrh, and smoky woods;
  • a cinnamon-rose-vanilla-caramel-laced patchouli fragrance;
  • a sugary, balsamic, oriental-gourmand hybrid centered on dry-sweet, smoky patchouli-infused woods;
  • a dry-sweet, caramel amber infused with patchouli, cinnamon-scented resins, smoky woods, and incense… You get the idea.
Source: bestourism.com

Source: bestourism.com

A number of those descriptions (intentionally) overlap or are related, but, if you look closely, in actuality, the emphasis or focal point differs in each. That’s because Taklamakan is a kaleidoscopic fragrance on my skin, emphasizing different notes during different stages each time I wear it, even if the general gist — give or take a few things — remains largely the same. But something else happens as well. It’s not merely that the details of the scent unfolds differently from one time to the next; it’s also that the driving focus of the fragrance occasionally shifts on its axis completely, making it difficult for me to know how to classify the fragrance in its broadest brush strokes. But the bottom line is that Taklamakan feels, wears, and looks like a very simple, uncomplicated fragrance. But it isn’t….

Photo: Adeeb Alani on 500px.com (direct website link embedded within.)

Photo: Adeeb Alani on 500px.com (direct website link embedded within.)

What makes the perfume more interesting and prettier than its (deceptive) surface simplicity is the movement underneath. Like the desert, Taklamakan’s notes shift like the sands, weaving in and out: patchouli dunes growing out of dry, hot sands of vanilla and caramel, curving for miles towards the horizon, shot through with charred woods whose puffs of smoke are carried out by the desert wind, past trickling rivers of cinnamon-scented resins, as a sandstorm looms in the distance, engulfing a withered rose and turning it into a ghostly figure. When it passes, the sky is heavy with amber and red from spices, but dusk turns the landscape grey as incense-myrrh-vanilla takes over. Sandalwood stirs, but the night falls on a land of dunes made from patchouli-tonka, sweet and dry, cozy and warm, a passing, final breath of red, gold, cream, and brown.

Like the desert, Taklamakan can take some getting used to because it isn’t the easiest fragrance at first sniff, at least not for someone with my extremely low threshold for sweetness. In fact, the very first time I wore it, I physically recoiled from the titanic blast of sugariness in the perfume’s opening, and it took two wearings to acclimate myself to it. Yet, much to my surprise, I’ve ended up being smitten with Taklamakan and turned to it a few times as a “cozy, comfort scent” in the last month when I was sick. It grew on me in such a way that — immense sweetness notwithstanding — I actually want a bottle. (I know, I’m surprised as well.)

Taklamakan. Photo & source: Stephane Humbert Lucas.

Taklamakan. Photo & source: Stephane Humbert Lucas.

I’ve provided an overview, context, and general description for Taklamakan, but let’s get to the specifics now. It is a pure parfum or extrait in Stéphane Humbert Lucas’ 777 Collection  (hereinafter referred to collectively as “SHL 777”), and it was supposed to be released in May. However, Monsieur Lucas just informed me that the launch has been delayed. Harrods will get the fragrance in about 3 weeks (so July), and everyone else in about six weeks (so, August). I normally try to avoid writing about fragrances that won’t launched for a while, but I had tested and written this review with the prior May release date in mind, so I apologise if I end up tempting you with something that isn’t immediately accessible.

There isn’t much information on Taklamakan at this time, but Fragrantica‘s Serguey Borisov interviewed Monsieur Lucas about it at Esxence earlier this year. His answers provide a lot of details, such as the inspiration for the scent (Monsieur Lucas’ feelings and state of mind following his divorce), and its core notes (vanilla and woods). What’s really important about that interview, though, is that Monsieur Lucas provides far more notes for the fragrance than what’s on the official list which — as a uniform rule when it comes to the SHL 777 fragrances — is always merely the most simplistic nutshell. In this case, the minimal basics he officially lists are:

Bergamot, Rose, Chinese Cedarwood, Sandalwood, Iris, Patchouli, Guaiac wood, Benzoin, Vanilla, Labdanum, Musk.

Vanilla Beans via seriouseats.com and shutterstock

Vanilla Beans via seriouseats.com and shutterstock

As always with SHL 777, that official list is incomplete. I detected a host of things which Monsieur Lucas later confirmed to me, from sweet myrrh (opoponax) to myrrh, ambergris, tonka, and more. Additional new elements were mentioned by Monsieur Lucas in his Borisov Fragrantica interview, like birch tar and cade wood oil, or the fact that he used Patchouli Coeur, a specific type of patchouli that has a dusty, clean, very woody profile instead of being green, camphorous, boozy, chocolate-y, tobacco-ish, dirty, or earthy. He used as much as 30 grams of it, a fact that is well reflected in the way Taklamakan behaves on my skin. That quantity stands in contrast to the amounts that he told me he used for some other notes: only a “few drops of rose, just for the impression, and bergamot, so little.” That’s because he intended for the rose to be a “ghost” (which, coincidentally enough, is literally how I described it in my notes), and for Taklamakan’s real focus to be on the dusty, dry, “black” and “peaty vanilla,” as well as the patchouli, the smoky woods, and the balsamic resins.

Source: curejoy.com

Source: curejoy.com

Taklamakan also has a strong, rich spiciness on my skin that always feels quite separate from either the cinnamon-scented benzoin resin or the patchouli, and that seems to stem from actual cinnamon. Monsieur Lucas said that he, too, experiences a lot of cinnamon on his skin, but that he didn’t actually use any. He said it’s the effect of the sweet myrrh, benzoin and labdanum combined together. However, it’s such a strong feature of Taklamakan (and, seemingly, an intentional one) that he explicitly mentions cinnamon in one part of the official text description: “A broken bone idea of peaty vanilla, old vanilla, vanilla excited by smoky notes enhancers, woody notes, a dip in musk and cinnamon prints […]’ (For the full official copy, you can read the end of the Fragrantica interview that I linked to earlier. The remainder of the text is more poetic and esoteric than informative, factual, or specific.) Given this prominence and official acknowledgement, one might as well put “cinnamon” on the note list as well, even if it’s placed in quotes the way Monsieur Lucas did in his correspondence with me.

Cade wood. Source: hermitageoils.com

Cade wood. Source: hermitageoils.com

The bottom-line is that Taklamakan’s real or actual note list, as confirmed by Monsieur Lucas, looks more like this:

Patchouli Coeur, Black Vanilla, Tonka Absolute, Bergamot, Rose, Birch Tar, Cade, Guaiac, Chinese Cedar, Myrrh, Sweet Myrrh, “Cinnamon,” Orris/Iris, Tolu Balsam, Labdanum amber, Ambreine, Ambergris, Benzoin resin, Sandalwood, and Musk.

"Gold Coast storm" by Cliff Vestergaard on Redbubble.com

“Gold Coast storm” by Cliff Vestergaard on Redbubble.com

Every time I’ve tried it, Taklamakan always opens on my skin as cream-gold sugared froth. That’s really the only way to describe it. Sugary vanilla is layered with caramel, spicy patchouli, and benzoin resin that is both cinnamon scented, slightly smoky, and slightly smoldering. The whole thing is then encased in a soft cloud of golden amber, and placed on a bed of hot sand. All around it lie small slivers of charred, singed woods, sending out puffs of smoke. Monsieur Lucas said that he used Chinese cedar which is extra smoky and dry, but guaiac and cade can be that way, too. On my skin, none of the woods in Taklamakan can be pulled out or easily identified beyond their general dry, charred character, but the mixed blend is a counterbalance to the immense sugariness of the first 30 minutes. (Not a very successful one, if you ask me. For someone like me, the opening minutes are very sweet.) The cumulative overall effect is a spicy, sweet, lush, but surprisingly dry oriental gourmandise that, really, truly, evokes hot, dry sand — if sand were made out of sugar, patchouli, caramel, and vanilla.

Croquembouche. Source: frenchmorning.com

Croquembouche. Source: frenchmorning.com

This is essentially the constant baseline for the opening bouquet, but Taklamakan is what I call a “prismatic” scent whose particular details vary from one wearing to the next, like a crystal chandelier throwing off colours and rays of light when the sun hits it. In one test, applying several, light smears amounting to 1 spray from an actual bottle, the level of sweetness felt practically oceanic at first, and made me think of other things besides the desert sands. First, a towering, spun sugar confection like a croquembouche, drizzled with caramel and enveloped in billowing clouds of cinnamon that almost smelt like Red Hot candies.

Ciel de Gum via Fragrantica.

Ciel de Gum via Fragrantica.

In this test, roughly 15-20 minutes into Taklamakan’s development, thoughts of a spun-sugar croquembouche changed to MFK‘s Ciel de Gum during its wonderful late middle and drydown phases. There were similarities, at least in this test, between the two scents that appeared as Taklamakan developed, thanks to the expanding, increasingly powerful waves of cinnamon-scented resins, vanilla, and amber. Here, there is, thankfully, no clean white musk in sight, but prominent amounts of spicy patchouli and smoky woods instead. Yet, the two fragrances are definitely neighboring planets in the same universe. Both are driven by heaping amounts of cinnamon-coated, caramelized sweetness and sticky, treacly, almost fiery resins. However, the difference is that Taklamakan is dry and sandy in a way that Ciel de Gum never was on my skin, in addition to being smokier and, I’d venture to say, even spicier. I think it’s noticeably sweeter as well, at least in Taklamakan’s first 20-30 minutes, thanks to a heightened emphasis on vanilla and that powerful, deep vein of caramel. Later on, it’s significantly woody in a way that, again, Ciel de Gum never was, so the two fragrances are hardly identical when taken as a whole. And, yet, Taklamakan has definite, strong, aesthetic, and balsamic kinship with the MFK in one of its stages, and that will be a positive thing for the many, many people who love Ciel de Gum.

Crème brulée, sugar-drenched vanillas are not my thing — at all — and, yet, despite that, something about this version of Taklamakan consistently drew me back, again and again, to sniff with some appreciation. The reason, I think, as best as I can figure it out, is the unexpected, strong, and almost tactile impression of the desert that develops after 20-30 minutes, that feel of scorched sandiness from which the charred remnants of blackened woods emit tendrils of smoke. The sand itself is made purely from grains of caramel and vanilla, but thick rivulets of dry, spicy patchouli are constantly oozing out, followed by black, balsamic resins (and American Red Hot candies). There are a few fragrances that manage to create that sense of desert sand (Micallef‘s Akowa and, to a much lesser extent, Parfumerie General‘s Djhenne), but this is the most ambered, balsamic, and the dryest.

Source: soapsupplier.co.uk

Dried rose petals. Source: soapsupplier.co.uk

Another test of Taklamakan yielded different impressions. The baseline was the same, but the prominence of various elements was different because, this time, the hot sands were made of primarily of patchouli laced with vanilla. The caramel was muted, while the woods were far more than mere slivers this time around. More importantly, the softest whisper of a dusty, withered rose echoed in the distant horizon, its voice almost a breath, its shape like a ghost that was enveloped and almost hidden from sight in a sand storm made from a lifetime of wood, vanilla, and patchouli ground down into dust.

Photo: Greg Russell alpenglowimagesphotography.com

Photo: Greg Russell alpenglowimagesphotography.com

This ghostly rose was followed by a second, even more muffled, shadowed figure, a suggestion of dry, lemony bergamot. Most of the time, it’s really an indeterminate sharpness that just barely — barely – suggests a sliver of dried lemon peel left at the bottom of a dusty, wooden barrel. This sense of dried, and occasionally sour, sharpness slowly intertwines itself around that withered rose, and then they just seem to fall into the patchouli. Sometimes, they’re so subsumed within it, that I wonder if the dried rose is merely a figment of my imagination but, sometimes, in two of my tests, it popped up and gave a more discernible wave, particularly when I was smelling Taklamakan on the scent trail in the air as opposed to close up.

Speaking of scent trails, Taklamakan is a bit of a paradox. Its core is like a glowing, red-gold-cream ball that is simultaneously both heavy and light in feel. The opening bouquet for much of the first 90 minutes is rather forceful up close with the main notes feeling heavy, both individually and cumulatively, but the general impression is also of frothy spun sugar and weightlessness. The scent itself is huge in reach. Once, when handling one of the small decants I was given, a mere drop or two (at most), of liquid got on my fingers without me noticing, and I was startled to suddenly find a large, dry-sweet cloud of woody vanillic froth swirling around me for almost an hour. When I applied a few smears equal to 2 sprays from an actual bottle, Taklamakan carried several feet, and left a scent trail behind me as I moved from room to room. In his Esxence Fragrantica interview, Monsieur Lucas said: “sillage is very important for me in every perfume, and I wanted to create the perfume with the long and durable sillage.” Well, trust me, mission accomplished, at least for the first 2.5 hours when Taklamakan is quite a monster before it settles down into something more on the big-to-moderate end of the scale.

Taklamakan is also a monster in terms of longevity which I’ll discuss in more detail later, but it’s significant to mention now because the effect of that immense life-span is that its various stages go on for quite a while and, as a result, the fragrance can seem almost linear at times. It’s not really, not when taken as a whole, but many of Taklamakan’s changes are so incremental at first that you don’t realize until hours later that the scent has completely changed direction. What is noticeable in the meantime, though, is the way the prominence and order of various core notes constantly shifts from one hour to the next, ebbing and flowing like the sands in the wind.

Photo & Source: Scientia Antiquitatis Magazine blog spot. (Direct website link embedded within.)

Photo & Source: Scientia Antiquitatis Magazine blog spot. (Direct website link embedded within.)

In half my tests, the patchouli led the charge on my skin during the first 6 hours, with the vanilla either following a few steps behind, or else fully fused together with it. The cinnamon became the third member of the trio after 3 hours, billowing out clouds of red over the landscape. The smoky cade and cedar bring up the rear, their tendrils of black smoke curling out and around the patchouli-vanilla. Once in a blue moon, a suggestion of leatheriness flits about, probably from the combination of the birch tar with the balsamic resins, and it’s lovely with the semi-gourmand, semi-dry vanilla-patchouli blend, particularly given the blanket of amber that covers everything. However, with a smaller application of scent, the sweet myrrh was far more prominent and distinct than the cade or the hint of leather, and its nutty, semi-dry, semi-honeyed, quietly incense-like, woodiness was even better with the patchouli, the cinnamon-scent resins, the dry “desert sands” vibe, and the increasingly strong ripples of chewy labdanum.

Source: ptpac.com

Source: ptpac.com

In the other half of my tests, it was the vanilla that took the lead, layered first with caramel and sugar, then with patchouli, before partnering with smoky woods from the 3rd hour onwards. I was fascinated by the transition from a frothy, sugar-spun, very gourmand accord into something significantly drier, woodier, and mostly oriental. By the time the 3rd hour rolled around, this version of Taklamakan was centered mostly on smoky vanilla, and what a great smoky vanilla it was, too. Slightly leathery, slightly resinous, fully singed, and with streaks of dry woods, patchouli, spice, and amber embedded within.

Almost all versions and tests of Taklamakan seem to converge in the later stages, following the same path. At the start of the 8th hour, the sandalwood and tonka slowly emerge, softening the other notes, coating the patchouli, amber, spiced resins, singed woods, and smoky, woody vanilla with creamy plushness, taming them, rounding out the edges, and putting a full stop to any lingering vestige of excess sweetness. At the same time, the myrrh and sweet myrrh begin to emerge on the sidelines, smelling wholly of incense this time around. Once in a blue moon, the sharp, withered, red rose flutters from within the patchouli, waving a hand “hello” for a moment before it sinks down and is swallowed up once more.

"Desert Angel," photo by Marco Antonio Alvarez Iglesias on Flickr. (Direct website link embedded within.)

“Desert Angel,” photo by Marco Antonio Alvarez Iglesias on Flickr. (Direct website link embedded within.)

The whole thing turns my head with its mix of coziness, amber, smoke, sweetness, dryness, woods, and spice. By the middle of the 10th hour, I feel sheathed in red or terracotta silk that is sweet, creamy, nutty, spiced, and golden. The sweetness is utterly perfect, never too much, and always far more dry than anything else. The labdanum is cut with vanilla and tonka, or is that the patchouli? It’s hard to tell because each note ripples into the next, seamlessly, exceptionally smooth, to create a goldenness that is addictive and sexy. The only word that repeatedly came to mind, again and again, was “purring.” A purring oriental centered on golden plushness.

In two of my tests, Taklamakan took a brief foray into other territory at the end of the 12th hour. Essentially, the patchouli steps back to let some other notes shine, and Taklamakan changes into an incense-vanilla combination for a few hours. The sweet myrrh, patchouli, labdanum, and quietly smoky woods remain, but they lie on the edges, watching as the myrrh swirls around, turning the vanilla grey-gold and faintly dusty. It’s still dry, sweet, smoky, spicy, and woody, but it’s primarily incense-driven now in a way that is quite lovely, even if it only lasts a few hours.

On my skin, the patchouli dominates all versions of the final drydown which typically begins about 14 or 15 hours into the perfume’s development. Taklamakan is a simple blur of tonka-laced patchouli, nebulously infused with other notes. Basically, it smells like creamy, dry, sweet, ambered, woody spiciness covered by the sheerest veil of somewhat woody, somewhat sweet dustiness. Taklamakan remains this way for hours, coating the skin and hanging on tenaciously until it finally dies away as a sliver of dry, spicy sweetness.

Photo: my own.

Photo: my own.

Taklamakan has monster longevity to go along with its initially monster sillage. The fragrance consistently lasted over 20 hours on my skin with several smears equal to 2 sprays from a bottle. In one test, it was 22 hours; in another 25, with one tiny, miniscule sliver of my arm chugging on for a few hours more. When I tested Taklamakan with a lesser amount equal to 1 spray, my longevity numbers consistently hit a minimum of 17 hours, with one wearing lasting 21 hours.

Typically, the projection is average, and the sillage does lose its mighty reach over time. With the equivalent of 2 sprays from a bottle, Taklamakan generally opens with about 4 inches of projection that drops to about 2 inches after 2.5 hours, which is also when the sillage lessens from several feet to about 6-8 inches. Everything becomes soft at the end of six hours; the projection hovers a half inch just above the skin, and the sillage is close to the body. Taklamakan typically becomes a skin scent about 8.25 to 8.5 hours into its development, but it remains easy to detect up close without any effort until roughly the 13th hour. At that point, it’s discreet, a silk coating on the skin, although I didn’t have problems picking it up when I put my nose on my arm. It’s absolutely there, no doubt, and stays that way for eons.

The Hairy German.

The Hairy German.

I should also mention that Taklamakan is one rich, persistent scent on clothing, even when you’re not spraying it on directly and it only seeps on through unintentional transference. The sleeve of my cardigan picked up the scent from one test two weeks ago, and it still remains strong, smelling so lovely that I find myself sniffing it nonstop. And, I must say, absolutely no-one smells better in Taklamakan than The Hairy German. After hugging him one night several days ago, he remains an absolutely glorious mix of fur, musk, spices, patchouli, vanilla, smoky woods, and chewy amber. He is the best and most expensive-smelling Teutonic Overlord in the entire state, I am certain of it.

Taklamakan hasn’t been released yet, so there are only a few detailed descriptions of it for me to share with you as a comparative analysis. One is the aforementioned Sergey Borisov who left a review on the perfume’s Fragrantica entry page under his regular posting name of “Q80.” For him, Taklamakan bore some faint similarities to SHL 777’s Qom Chilom, perhaps because of the dry, dusty, almost ashy quality in both scents, but he adds:

it has much less cherries and more of sharp roses to presents the dark blotted clotted blood with the help of Guaiac Wood. I can smell the musc that gives the dirty death note in an amazing way and some sandalwood, iris, and a slight vanilla to give the silence of the desert although it should be sandy instead but it’s not in this juice. I even can smell Stephane’s main note which is almonds. I can even smell citrusy patchouli.

This is a not love at first sniff but tolerable over time AND it might go to your favorites shelve if you like sharp roses and the scene it describes.

It’s interesting how much rose he seems to have experienced. Obviously, skin chemistry plays a major role in things, so you should keep that if you’re turned off by the thought of “sharp roses.” Monsieur Lucas said Taklamakan only has a drop or two of rose in the blend, but 30 grams of patchouli. Perhaps the frequency with which rose is paired with patchouli is responsible for the association, or perhaps it’s merely skin chemistry.

Roses never once came up for the only person to try Taklamakan and to talk about it on Basenotes. “Fly777” wrote a small, brief description in Comment #8 of a Basenotes discussion thread, and his experience was very similar to mine. He called Taklamakan “the discovery of the [Exsence] show,” adding

It is beautiful, some sweetness, spices and vanilla, smoky at the beginning, after a few hours with remarkable patchouly heart, but still charming, flattering, embracing. Great silage and it lasts and lasts. A masterpiece. I love it and will certainly purchase it. Completely unisex.

He elaborated a bit further on the olfactory profile when asked how it compared to SHL 777’s 2022 Generation Homme, replying:

Taklamakan is less oriental-spicy, but more balsamic-woody. Spices play, if at all, a minor role.

I obviously experienced a ton of spiciness as compared to him, but I share his feelings about the appealing nature of the scent, the patchouli being at its heart (or heart stage), the sillage, the longevity, and the fact that it is wholly unisex. I think it’s also the sort of thing that is very easy to wear in general.

Having said that, I don’t think this is a scent for people who hate patchouli. The variety used here, Patchouli Coeur, is very clean and the furthest thing from a 1970s “head shop” smell, but patchouli is patchouli. If you hate it, the large amount here probably won’t be for you, even if it is mostly woody or leavened with gourmand elements.

Speaking of which, I have no idea how people who dislike sweetness or any sort of gourmands will react to Taklamakan. I have an incredibly low threshold of tolerance, and yet I still ended up falling for the scent anyway. Part of it is that things become much more manageable after the rather brutal first 20 minutes (so much sugariness! Gah!); part of it is that one becomes acclimated after one wearing; and part of it is the counterbalance provided by all the other accords, most of which increase exponentially in strength as time goes by, cutting through the sweetness and keeping it in check. If someone like me found the result addictive the more I tried it, then perhaps other sugar-phobes may as well. My advice is to be patient, and to give Taklamakan at least two tries before you make up your mind. Also, I think larger scent applications bring out the balancing notes, particularly the smoky woods, spice, and patchouli, while smaller dosages seem to emphasize the caramel and sugar in the first 90 minutes. So, play around with quantity as well.

I’m strongly inclined to buy a bottle of Taklamakan when it comes out, and it helps that it’s priced at the lower end of the SHL 777 range at $185 or €148. That’s for a 50 ml bottle of pure parfum that has roughly the same high 24% concentration as the other fragrances in the line. As a side note, the actual suggested retail price for Europe is €135, but First in Fragrance charges €148 for the SHL 777s in this category, like the lovely iris-amber-heliotrope, Khol de Bahrein, or the gourmand immortelle-marmalade-tobacco, Une Nuit à Doha. Still, the point is that Taklamakan is not at the high end of the SHL scale (like the magnificent but exorbitantly priced amber monster, O Hira) and it is relatively “cheap,” at least on a purely comparative basis.

All in all, Taklamakan is my favourite out of the last three, recent SHL 777 releases, and I give it a big thumbs up!

Disclosure: My perfume samples were provided courtesy of Stéphane Humbert Lucas. That did not influence this review. I do not do paid reviews, and my opinions are my own.

DETAILS:
Cost & Availability: Taklamakan is an extrait or pure parfum that is only available in a 50 ml bottle that costs $185 or €148 (but with a suggested retail price of €135). It will be released worldwide in August, but I’ll provide you with links to various retailers’ general SHL 777 pages for you to use at that time. In the U.S.: SHL 777 is sold at Luckyscent and Osswald NYC. Both sell samples. Outside the U.S.: you’ll find SHL 777 at First in Fragrance. (They price things at €148 instead of €135.) Zurich’s Osswald also carries the brand. In London, you can find the line at Harrod’s Black Room, while in Paris, they are exclusive to Printemps under the name 777. The Swiss perfumery, Theodora, also has SHL 777, but no e-store. In Cannes, France, the store Taizo is said to carry the 777 line, but no e-store. In Russia, SHL 777 is sold at Lenoma. Ukraine’s Sana Hunt Luxury store also carries the line, but they don’t have an e-store. In the Middle East, the SHL 777 line is available at Harvey Nichols and Bloomingdale’s in the UAE’s Dubai Mall. Samples: Luckyscent and Osswald NYC will offer samples once Taklamakan is out. Osswald’s Sample Program is limited to the U.S., and has a 3-order minimum. You can call (212) 625-3111 if you have questions.

26 thoughts on “SHL 777 Taklamakan: Desert Sands, Desert Gold

  1. This is a **beautiful** review. “Red-gold-cream ball”? 30 grams of patchouli? Yes, please. Even though I’m a bit nervous about the “sharp roses” and the sweetness, there’s no way a sample isn’t happening, probably right after I hit “post comment”. After all, it’s been at least 3 or 4 weeks since the last ones! 😉
    So sorry to hear you’ve been ill.

    • Oops, got so excited I failed to see the “August” part.
      Good, I need to learn some restraint.

    • 50 ml “sample”… heheh 😀 😀 But, you know, I think you will love this one, Hajusuuri. A LOT. So, our jokes about your “sample” habits notwithstanding, I think a full bottle is probably a good idea in the end.

  2. So glad to see you writing again, with your review for Masque Milano L’Attesa previously. Hope you’re completely recovered from pneumonia (never had it, but it sure sounds dreadful). Don’t know what to say about jury duty, but I can imagine that nobody enjoys it.

    SHL 777 sure seems to have a lot of winners in its lineup. Tried O Hira, Soleil de Jeddah and Black Gemstone before and they’re amazing in every way. Now that Taklamakan is another winner, my interest is piqued to try it if I have the chance.

    After seeing how much it conjures images of the desert and how it reminds you of other certain fragrances, I’m surprised that you didn’t draw any parallels with the well-known L`Air du Desert Marocain by Andy Tauer. Tried this before and I remember how spicy-sweet and dry it is. Surely there must be some similarities, I think 😉

    • The spice profile is completely different in L’Air du Désert Marocain, imo. Not only are there are a whole slew of them, but they gave me the vibe of the dusty bottom of an old spice drawer in a Moroccan souk or bazaar. Here, it’s really just cinnamon. Plus, LDDM didn’t really have a textural feel of hot, scorched sands, imo, and it’s hardly so vanilla or patchouli driven as this one. No comparison at all in that last regard. In general, the entire balance and feel of LDDM’s notes are different. LDDM is more of a dusty spice market in amber. This is more patchouli, woody vanilla, and smoky woods. LDDM also has a *lot* of ISO E, along with the creosote tarriness that is such a major part of the Tauerade signature base. That always stays in my memory of LDDM, and it’s one of the reasons why I’m not one of its (admittedly legion) gushing fans.

      Taklamakan doesn’t smell of any raspy, scratchy aromachemicals or ISO E, and it’s at a whole other quality level, imo. It has a smoothness and richness that far exceed LDDM.

      You’ll have to try it and tell me how you think they compare. 🙂 Btw, have you ever tried SHL 777’s Oumma? Because that one has quite a few fans, too. If you like rose-oud combinations, you may want to see if you can get a sample of that one as well. And O Hira… oh, Ô Hira, what a stunner that one is! Definitely one of the major stand outs in the line, imo.

      OT (off topic), thank you again for your sweet FB message whilst I was sick. I was very touched.

      • Well yeah, I definitely feel the same way for LDDM. It’s very sweet, spicy and dry to me but never dark, deep and woody. Plus, I can’t really sense ISO E Super so that doesn’t affect me much (for the better, it seems).

        I thought I pretty much covered the main ones from SHL 777 from my previous trip to NYC but seeing Oumma… well, guess I’m wrong. Rose-oud is a combo note done to death so I normally overlook them… but really? Tolu balsam too? Now that sounds like a deal maker!

        P.S. I did try Ô Hira and got a precious sample for my ambergris/amber-loving friend but he hasn’t worn it once because it’s “too strong and unwearable”. Frankly, I think he’s not man enough to pull it off 😛

        • Hahaha, your last sentence made me snort up my coffee when I first read it. Grab that sample from him, Nazrul! An amber lover who doesn’t appreciate O Hira and finds it too rich, intense, or strong… pfft. You take the O Hira, and wear it yourself.

          As for the ISO E Super, I know it doesn’t bother you and I’m completely envious. I really am. My life as a reviewer would be much easier if it were an invisible note the way it is for so many others. I often feel as though people don’t really understand what I’m talking about, or why I don’t like something as a result. But once a switch flips in your nose and brain, it’s really hard to get around it. I hope that switch never happens to you, my dear.

  3. I’m in. Opoponax grey Amber patchouli tolu… All fantastic mermaids calling my name. I’ll pick up a sample in October when I’m back in Canada for a conference. Thanks for the advance heads up. I really really like his work.
    Three things. Oud. I tried ex idolo Ryder’s thirty three and enjoyed it. A tad sweet perhaps and beautiful. I’ve steered clear of ouds but I wonder if you might recommend some starting points for me? oumma duly noted from above.
    As for the books. Sigh. I’m only giving away the ones I know I won’t read again. And only to people I care about and know will deeply enjoy them. And all the ones I have collected for children are going to my two best friends kids. So. The giving is meaningful. The rest I’ll cargo with me. Paring down is interesting. And addictive 🙂 but all my scents bottles and samples are coming with me! Lol
    Oesel. The petit grain is glorious in it. But it’s more the warmth of the scent. Like a warm wind is blowing through orange blossom trees. And also a certain nonfloral feel beyond trees that conjures up something not spicy but. The Andalusian mosques and stone buildings come to mind. The tobacco is defining on me. Not directly but helps to round out the floral to something less airy and more earthy. I have too many samples to wade through so it’s going on my order-ahead-of-time delivery to my brother when I swing by Canada in October (along with SHL 777 samples apparently). Oesel is way way better than George I think. If ever you trip on a spritz of it, let me know.

  4. Dearest K, I am starting at the beginning kind of like The Yellow Brick Road! Lol then work my way backwards to where I left off in April I certainly missed a lot and since I’m not sleeping whatsoever and have restless leg syndrome, I thought what better way to spend the entire night going over perfume. Excuse my typing been awhile. This sounds really really nice despite the initial sweetness. I love Patchouli and the pricing is great. Oddly for me conjuring words is a bit of a problem right now as my brain chemicals are quite disordered as you can guess, but I’ll be back to old form before long rest assured! 😉
    And K, thank you so much for your email; it truly helped me feel better. Thanks dear and hugs too. 😀

  5. Uch Hello there, not sure if my first comment got through as I’m having phone issues. I thought I’d start at the beginning like the yellow brick road. since I am not sleeping at all at night and have restless leg syndrome I thought what better way to spend my evening but reading about my favorite subject. this actually sounds really nice despite the initial sweetness. I love patchouli also. the pricing is definitely reasonable. I love your entire description of it. I think I will sample this when it is available.
    K, you don’t know how your email helped me feel sooo much better about the situation. Another person’s perspective you know. I really am truly grateful to you, the blog and all the cool people here. I’d give you a hug if the German would allow it! Hah I’m.glad he smells great, also. ;).Thanks dear xx

    • Ok well I see the other one went through. LOL That’s my phone I guess..
      ggrrr

  6. Welcome back! After reading your beautiful description of this fragrance and seeing how much you like it, I’m going to put it on my test list, it sounds like something that needs to be tried 🙂

  7. I have tried this beautiful perfume in Milan at Excence and it was one of the most stunning experiences. Funny thing – I do not smell any “desert” in this perfume at all. I smell burning woods and grass in September in a small town between Moscow and St Petersburg. I smell my childhood – the beginning of the school season and the end of the so short and beloved summer. I feel like I am a child again parting with the careless warm days and waiting for the dull dark and cold many months ahead. In fact when I read the interview by Borisov about the perfume being created after divorce it got so much sence to me. For me the smell of it is definitely the smell of departure. Strangely comforting though sad. I hope I shall be able to buy it )

    • The things it evokes for you are powerful, Natalia, even if they’re bitter-sweet. I could see how moving and impactful it would be to relive such memories and such a part of one’s life. Thank you for sharing, because it was lovely to read your scent memories. 🙂

  8. Sorry to hear you were sick for so long. I can’t wait to try this one! It appears I love what you do, most of the time, and I really liked Ciel de Gum (which lasts about 8 minutes on me). Monster longevity? Usually the only things that have THAT on my skin are scrubbers! Great review! Now, to catch up with other unread posts. . .

    • I think you’d love this one, Julie. Hopefully, it would also last on your voracious skin. You’ll have to let me know what happens and what you think when you try it.

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  12. I know this is very late but just to say Kafka that I DID get to Harrods but it took me a year and I did try this and it IS gorgeous!! The SA sprayed a modest amount on my arm and it was just right. SHe was lovely btw and she didnt do the hard sell. I wore it all afternoon and through a performance of Beethoven at the Albert Hall and it stayed and it was lovely. It has that spicy dry almost Tauer like desert air but it has a honey’d sweetness which just wafts through every now and again. The ingredients are high end I would think and I loved it. So me…..BUT I’ve just ordered a lot of Sultan Pasha’s attars and my perfume kitty is well and truly on a fast. But thank you for the great review and this line is certainly one to remember and sample further and maybe when kitty is a bit fatter I may buy a FB It would definately be worth it!!

    • Thank you for coming back to share the update, Katie. I’m delighted to hear this one worked for you and the reasons why.

      Also, totally separately, Beethoven at the Albert Hall… lucky devil. It must have been a superlative evening. He’s one of my top, top favourite composers. A fragrance one loves + Beethoven + Albert Hall = perfect!

  13. Hello Kafka, reading your reviews is always a pleasure !!
    I have a request for you : I’m a 30 years old man for Middle East (strong perfumes don’t bother us) and I’m about to buy one of this tree perfumes : black gemstone, taklamakan or mortal skin. I already tried B.G but according to your reviews these two are also interesting and the problem is that I can’t find samples… I trust your taste and I trust the connoisseur you are, so can please advise me or at least choose one of them. Thank you for your time !!

    • Hi Mehdi, welcime to the blog. Tell me your tastes, the notes you love or don’t love, how much or how little sweetness you enjoy, and how much smoke you like, and then I’ll be able to give you a better assessment. By the way, if you love either rose, oud, or intensely smoky fragrances, then I would recommend looking up the reviews for SHL 777’s Oumma, Oud 777, and Rose de Petra before deciding. If you’re a hardcore labdanum amber fan and money is no object, then I’d really recommend reading the SHL 777 O Hira review. Personally, I think several of those fragrances are far better than Mortal Skin but it does ultimately depend on the notes that *you* love and hate.

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