The perfume Abu Dhabi, composed by the perfumer Mylène Arlan, has a guest of honor: the date. This tasty fruit, emblematic of the oasis of Al Ain, a cultural and botanical Emirati heritage, gives the fragrance its delicately generous and enveloping character. Abu Dhabi evokes the gentle undulation of a palm tree, and the caress of a fabric, that of al Sadu, a traditional Bedouin weaving technique, which adorns the bottle. About the bottle: The Bottle of Abu Dhabi is inspired by Al-Sadu patterns, the traditional Emirati weaving technique. The perfume is the result of happy encounters, a serene balance between sea and desert. It is simply the fruit. The precious date. Tasty, sweet, generous. The plum too, its salty warmth. It carries within it the gentle undulation of a dune, of a flow. Its name, polished by the sands of Al Wahtba, by the Arabian Gulf, rounded like the landscape of the mangrove national park. In the evening air, it comes to greet the amber and saffron reflection of a giant glass shimmering on the surface of the water. Or is it the dreamed vision of a perfume bottle that emerges there? Abu Dhabi, its name oscillates in two times, sways to the rhythm of a palm, in the oasis of Al Ain, where it is also welcomed by the aromatic freshness of cardamom and the woody breadth of vetiver. The secret of its inner pendulum: to be at once devoted to the impulses of the present and woven of eternity, like the Sadu, this traditional artisanal fabric of the Emirates, with patterns that come alive with a thousand shared stories. A Sadu, like the one that comes to dress the bottle of the perfume Abu Dhabi, for it is indeed its brilliance that has revealed itself there, in the bay.




