- Inspired Fragrances – Amélie
- AMOUAGE
- ARMANI/PRIVE
- BDK
- Boadicea the Victorious
- Bohoboco
- BOND no 9
- BVLGARI
- BYREDO
- Cartier
- Chanel
- Clive Christian
- CREED
- DIOR
- Ex-Nihilo
- Floraïku
- Fragrance One
- Frederic Malle
- Givenchy
- GUERLAIN
- Hermès
- INITIO
- JO MALONE
- Kayali
- KEMI BLENDING MAGIC
- KILIAN
- Lancôme
- LE LABO
- Louboutin
- LOUIS VUITTON
- Maison Crivelli
- Maison Francis Kurkdjian
- Matiere Premier
- MEMO
- Memo Paris
- Mind Games
- Nasomatto
- ORTO PARISI
- PARFUMS DE MARLY
- PENHALIGON’s
- Phlur
- ROJA
- SoOud
- SPIRIT OF DUBAI
- Thameen
- The HARMONIST
- THE SPIRIT OF DUBAI
- TOM FORD
- Unique’s Luxury
- Vilhelm
- XERJOFF
- YSL
- Zoologist
- *Other Brands*
- Originals – Preproduction Perfumery
Terra Noire by Amélie in New York is a fragrance born from the depths of the earth, where ancient heat meets mineral salt, and sweetness flickers beneath smoke and shadow. Inspired by Tero by Nishane, Terra Noire is a genderless ode to grounded sensuality, a scent that doesn’t rise — it pulls you in.
It opens with a daring contrast: golden caramel melting over cracked pepper and crystallized salt. The interplay of Sichuan and black pepper creates a spark — sharp, electric — while the caramel lingers like the glow of molten stone. It is a sweet that refuses to behave.
As the heart unfolds, earthy patchouli anchors the fragrance in its terrain, rich and rooted, while cinnamon coils through it like dry heat rising off sun-scorched soil. There’s something raw here — not rustic, but elemental. Like a memory buried in sediment.
The base is where the soul of Terra Noire rests — warm amber, smoky oak, and the dry green hush of vetiver. Together, they form an afterglow that feels ancient and sacred, like the final whisper of fire turning to coal beneath your skin.
Terra Noire is for those who long for stillness that hums with tension — a fragrance that feels like walking barefoot on black volcanic sand, or tracing the outline of something precious buried deep beneath the surface.
It doesn’t bloom. It burns slow. And it lingers — like the earth’s own memory.
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