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[¹⁶S] Sulphur 2013

7.3 / 10 45 Ratings
A perfume by One of those for women and men, released in 2013. The scent is woody-spicy. The production was apparently discontinued.
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Main accords

Woody
Spicy
Smoky
Animal
Fresh

Fragrance Notes

AngelicaAngelica CostusCostus MossMoss MyrrhMyrrh OpoponaxOpoponax PatchouliPatchouli VetiverVetiver PimentoPimento CastoreumCastoreum CinnamonCinnamon GrapefruitGrapefruit

Perfumer

Ratings
Scent
7.345 Ratings
Longevity
7.034 Ratings
Sillage
6.637 Ratings
Bottle
6.937 Ratings
Value for money
8.613 Ratings
Submitted by Franfan20 · last update on 02/04/2026.
Source-backed & verified

Smells similar

What the fragrance is similar to
Kinski by Kinski Fragrance
Kinski

Reviews

4 in-depth fragrance descriptions
Elysium

917 Reviews
Elysium
Elysium
1  
Lucifer: The Enchanter Of The Senses
What is that horrible smell? If you’ve never smelled Sulfur, it’s hard to describe how awful it is. Most of those who have it describe it as a rotten egg smell, and so do I. That smell is probably hydrogen sulfide, commonly called Sulfur. The latter is a mineral that exists in nature and is widely found in water reserves. As long as sufficient oxygen is present, it exists in a combined form with oxygen and presents no odor problems. However, in the absence of oxygen, there may be conditions that convert the combined form of oxygen to a mixed format with hydrogen, i.e., hydrogen sulfide, which creates a compound with a distinctive rotten egg odor. While this odor is annoying, the water is safe for consumption. There are healing spas where you drink water rich in Sulfur. Oh man, you must wonder what Sulfur [¹⁶S] smells like.
I hope the rotten eggs smell of Sulfur not inspired perfumer Antoine Lie, who’s the nose behind Hydrogen and Oxygen. Keep calm and read on. Happily, it does not smell of Sulfur at all, despite the telling name. I sensed almost complete denial of what the perfume name and chemical character of Sulfur could suggest. Sulfur [¹⁶S] features a contrast between spices and woods with balmy, aromatic, resinous, leathery, mossy, and woody accords and represents the satanic spirit. A juice from the shadow, the gloomy afterlife where the shadows walk, a satanic elixir. Nothing is pure; instead, it evokes infernal potions, it’s fire and darkness.

Sulfur [¹⁶S] welcomes me with an explosion of aromatic and citrusy accords. The Hesperides are present in the very first moments. The bitterness of the grapefruit peel feels good, with its natural sulfur sort. Still, as soon as it recedes, it gives way to a piquant black pepper that lasts just a while before a tremendous aromatic scent, really tremendous, pops in, rich in mentholated and balsamic rosemary drowned in boozy grapefruit juice. A minty facet might come from the black angelica, reminiscent of wool cloth and mothballs, and sometimes akin to the Vicks VapoRub ointment, while the spicy aspect results in cold and dark. Indeed, a curl of warmth comes from the cinnamon bark. The dustiness from cinnamon and angelica acts as exciting accents. Together they create a dusty sound. The initial stage is smothering, stiff, slightly boozy, and intoxicates the senses. Something quite elementary emerges, a tiny mineral and a tad earthy.

Now that the initial blast has cleared the ground, a new dance begins. The rhythm changes, and Sulfur [¹⁶S] releases its more animal notes, costus, and castoreum that wrap themselves in a sensual embrace and add their indisputably warm muskiness, leatheriness, and wet presence, supported by the sweetness of opoponax and myrrh. The latter adds a deeply resinous touch to the heart, almost touching an oriental profile.

The dry-down is smoother, simple, but very refined and extremely well blended. Smoky and tart cedar and guaiac woods simmer with heady balms, softened by salty oakmoss and naughty patchouli. The woods are steamy and heat like the one inside a sauna. The resulting concoction brings the scent down to the deepest earth. I also get the earthy vetiver, not yet listed here but mentioned in some perfume’s magazines.

The body surrenders to the breath of the inner soul. All in all, it is a perfume that doesn’t smell like Sulfur but has sulfur properties hidden in its soul. Sulfur [¹⁶S] is very masculine, indeed manly. It is a pleasant, safe, discreet warm weather scent with great versatility. A well-crafted fresh scent with tangible spicy notes. Ozone freshness and cut grass, wet salt, and spilled pepper. To acknowledge Sulfur [¹⁶S] and all the other One of Those elements, you required an unconventional and brave approach, a free and open-minded spirit.

This review was based on a 100ml bottle I own since March 2021.

-Elysium
Updated on 03/20/2021
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Drseid

828 Reviews
Drseid
Drseid
3  
Where The Rubber Meets The Road...
Sulphur opens opens with a fresh slightly tart grapefruit and mild peppery angelica tandem before transitioning to its early heart. During the early heart the grapefruit and angelica remain briefly before giving way to a growing leathery castoreum and latex rubber-like costus starring tandem with cinnamon spice acting as key support. During the late dry-down a very natural smelling cedar takes over the focal role, mixing with remnants of the cinnamon, castoreum and costus that all remain, now in support. Projection is very good and longevity excellent to outstanding at over 12 hours on skin.

Sulphur is one of those scents that first impressions can prove quite deceptive. When first sprayed on paper for an early read all that stood out was "burnt tire rubber" and that was not a good sign. Indeed, even early when sprayed on skin as one sniffs their wrist up close to evaluate the composition it still comes off in similar fashion. It would be easy to see many dismissing the composition if that is the way the fragrance is solely evaluated. Where Sulphur begins to win the wearer over is in its sillage. When smelled from the scent trail perspective the nuances of the composition are revealed. What comes off as tire rubber up close, shows as smoky latex-like costus in the sillage flanked by dry hardcore leathery castoreum. That is surely a step in the right direction, but what really won *this* reviewer over was the cinnamon that completely makes the composition even though it never is the focus. The cinnamon balances the "bite" of the rubbery facets with additional support from some well-concealed ingredient in the heart adding just the slightest amount of sweetness to the mix. The dry-down is also quite pleasant smelling; as cedar is utilized quite well, melding perfectly with the sulfur-like asphalt remnants from the early heart. The bottom line is Sulphur is not the kind of composition that is super-easily likable, but if one gives this 3.5 star out of 5 "very good" rated composition a chance it may very well win you over. Recommended.
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Palonera

467 Reviews
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Palonera
Palonera
Top Review 21  
a dark greeting from the lord of hell?
One must give it to the scents from nu_be: They don't let me die dumb.
Having already been pushed back to the classroom by "Carbon," "Lithium," and "Helium" after decades, "Sulphur" soon sent me to Wikipedia to first find out what the name is all about.
In contrast to the three aforementioned, "Sulphur" was completely foreign to me; I couldn't have said blindly whether it is a metal, a noble gas, a halogen, or whatever, whether it is liquid, gaseous, or solid.
I had no idea and would certainly have believed it was a joke if someone had explained to me that "Sulphur" is the Latin term for sulfur, that bright yellow non-metal that triggers various associations for me, but certainly not those related to perfume.

Sulfur, with all due respect, is a stinker.
At least in its burned form, as sulfur dioxide.
In the late seventies and early eighties, large parts of the Ruhr area smelled of sulfur dioxide, in short: of rotten eggs.
This was mainly due to the steel industry, but also to the extraction of energy from the fossil fuels commonly used at that time, such as hard and brown coal.
My school route from the fresh air of the Sauerland to Bochum and later Dortmund led day by day through not-so-pleasant fumes from local industrial chimneys, which secretly made me wish to lose my sense of smell as well, at least for the moment.
These prayers were not heard, thank a wise someone, and today the air in the Ruhr area is as clear and pure as it was not even at grandma's in the countryside back then.

And sulfur should now be the name of a fragrance, albeit Greekized and almost unrecognizable for me, but still?!
I confess: Had I received this information before the test began, I would have approached the encounter with "Sulphur" with the utmost caution, not least because Antoine Lie, the perfumer, is not unjustly regarded as the "enfant terrible" of the scene.
His account includes highly controversial creations like "Sécrétions magnifiques," "Tom of Finland," and "Divin' Enfant" from ELdO, "XX+Latex" from UèrMì, "RED+MA" from Blood Concept, and other candidates that divide the olfactory community into love-me-or-hate-me.
And here we have "Sulphur" as a dark greeting from the lord of hell?
I would have believed it and I would have been afraid, if - yes, if I hadn't read all this only on day 2, on the second day of dealing with a fragrance that stirs many things within me, but certainly not the desire for olfactory blindness.

"Sulphur" does not linger on citrus formalities - not on me, not on my skin.
Ambroxan-like birch tar bursts forth, hard and intense, loud and lustful, going straight to the point like "Testostérone."
At first, this is shocking, but while I still wonder what might follow such a furious start, the noise calms down to a dry woody-smoky spice, neither dense nor heavy nor oppressive.
Camphor or eucalyptus comes to mind given the ethereal coolness that runs through the dark gray, making it lighter and airier, yet not a bit softer.
Pimento sharpens into focus, peppery and a little biting, flanked after a few minutes by a green-bitter accord that I attribute to costus root, though I must guess without knowledge of its scent.
While the wood in "Sulphur" initially raised some doubts about its origin, whether tree or retort, the cedar soon reveals itself against a pencil-like background.
Everything in "Sulphur" happens quickly; the scent seems always in motion, as if it lacks time.
Within a few minutes, golden-red resin dominates, flanked by warm spice, where unsweetened cinnamon gains contour in a rough-barky way, only to soon give way to dry dark wood with a medicinal-bitter facet that at least makes the presence of oud conceivable for me.
Somewhere much later, I even catch a whiff of celluloid, the piercing-dark kind that bit sharply into my nose in "Id" and "Chambre Noire."
And it continues back and forth, forth and back, from shadow to light and back again, over and over, day after day.
Sometimes a little more resin, sometimes a little more wood, sometimes warmer and sometimes cooler, depending on the weather, depending on the day's condition.
And every day, "Sulphur" slowly quiets down, clings tighter to my feminine skin, draping its wood with dark green mosses and fading after hours deeply familiar.
14 Comments
7Scent
Bertel

236 Reviews
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Bertel
Bertel
Helpful Review 6  
Silvery-Woody Mephisto
"[16S] Sulphur" is one of the two newcomers in the esoteric elements portfolio of the "nu_be" line from Alberto Borri's house Fluidounce, alongside "[80Hg] Mercury".

From the very start, "[16S] Sulphur" briefly reminds me of Lubin's "Korrigan", likely due to the spicy-herbaceous opening (here allspice and rosemary, there juniper) as well as some woody-smoky undertones. However, "[16S] Sulphur" quickly evolves towards bright, radiant, almost silvery citrus wood and moss notes, still with a smoky foundation.

One need not fear sulfur fumes here, yet the satanic allusion is intended, as the fragrance, according to Borri, refers to the demonic being, the dark instinct. For me, nothing here is dark; both the spicy notes and the woods and smoky tones are sharp, bright, metallic, and come across as quite synthetic. This seems to be quite intentional, as Antoine Lie was the creator of CdG's "Wonderwood", which I recognize throughout much of the development here. Towards the base, the fragrance develops distinctly mossy-woody (notably herby oak moss, damp guaiac wood, silvery-dry cedar), almost slightly sour in the direction of "Kinski" in my perception, without losing its silvery wafts, as the demons retreat into their niches and corners.

The proximity to the concept and attitude of CdG is both explained and desired, and is easily understandable through Borri's history and "nose" Lie. However, "Wonderwood" and most CdG fragrances are not at all on my wavelength, and I do not see the demonic-mephistophelian dark theme well captured and realized here, so that "[16S] Sulphur" does not belong to the highlights of the very interesting "nu_be" line for me, nor will it find a place in my collection. Nevertheless, I strongly recommend "[16S] Sulphur" for testing to lovers of the CdG philosophy and fragrances!
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Statements

10 short views on the fragrance
1
A well-crafted fresh scent with tangible piquancy. Ozone freshness, cut grass, wet salt, and spilled pepper. Animal and mineral, as required.
0 Comments
20
29
A typical love. Angular and clearly intentional chemistry. Sharp grapefruit, sharp spices, animalistic costus, but in moderation....
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29 Comments
9
13
This one has edges and corners, this mossy, vetiver-green, floral-fresh, almost a bit furry, strictly synthetic sulfur.
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13 Comments
3
2
Slightly sour green, woody, underlined with a gentle incense-like note and a dry dustiness - contemplative. Unique.
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2 Comments
3
Synthetic cool and a bit rough. A scent for someone completely different.
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7 years ago
2
2
Animalistic grapefruit. Bitter and spicy. Doesn't quite fit but somehow does. Green, dark, woody. Black cloak.
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2 Comments
1
Like Kinski without the animalic... woody, dry, linear, green... has something!
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1
Fragrant dry grasses; earthy moss; spicy and waxy; grapefruit flesh.
No sulfur in sight.
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9 years ago
1
Wonderwood with less Iso and no pepper
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Bertel's comparison with Korrigan is spot on; it's a bit messy, that's Kostus, the spices + metallic-green, wood are there, but they don't do it for me.
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