Sunlit and spiced.

Asfar A Way

Eau de Parfum

$295.00
New
Size: 100mL
The Story
The sun has always lived inside us, warming sand and skin, loosening doubt until it falls away.

This is that warmth made wearable. Creamy tuberose unfolds slow and golden, wrapped in vanilla and woods worn smooth by light. Spice threads through it like heat rising off the ground, cumin and cardamom giving the flowers an earthy, sun-baked edge. Tobacco and myrrh add a low curl of smoke, while amber holds everything in a soft, lasting glow. It feels like late afternoon stretched long, a memory of heat that lingers after the day is gone. Made for slow evenings and bare shoulders, for anyone who wants to carry a little sunrise wherever the hours lead.

The Notes
Mandarin · Coconut · Tobacco · Tuberose · Ylang Ylang · Jasmine · Neroli · Cumin · Cardamom · Patchouli · Vanilla · Violette Leaves · Amber · Broom · Myrrh · Musks
The Perfumer
  • Maiada El Khalifa
The Brand

Tayshaba is a Paris-based niche fragrance house founded by Maiada El Khalifa, the first Franco-Sudanese perfumer. A descendant of Sudanese independence fighters with ancestral roots on Aba Island in the White Nile, Tayshaba was built around a conviction that beauty should be a truth — not a convention. After studying olfactory design in Grasse and Paris, Maiada turned to the ancient perfume traditions of Sudan as raw material, reimagining centuries-old recipes through a singular lens. The brand's name fuses "Taiasha" — a fierce ancestral tribe — with "Aba," the island at the center of the family's history, arriving at the phrase that drives everything: Fierce Beauty.

Each Tayshaba fragrance is a meeting point between Sudanese heritage and French craft — rare ingredients, ancestral secrets, and an insistence on making something that belongs to no one category. The signature scent, Ahmar Danse, reclaims a bridal ritual rooted in the Kingdom of Kush. The collection is fully vegan and built around ethical sourcing and minimal-waste packaging. Visually and philosophically, the brand moves like the Nile itself: crossing cultures, refusing containment, telling you exactly who you are.