Startup of the Week: Saudi perfumer aims for uniqueness and originality

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Updated 13 October 2020
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Startup of the Week: Saudi perfumer aims for uniqueness and originality

  • The brand has six types of bases and each base has a variety of perfumes: Oud, musk, vanilla, baby powder, floral and fruity

A Saudi perfumer made her childhood dream come true and started her own brand, Teebal Eter, after returning home from a six-year educational stint in the US.
Hadeel Bogari told Arab News that creating perfumes was a “God-given” skill.
“Designing perfumes was something in me since I was a very young girl. When I was in high school I remember that I used to mix perfumes and I always had this unique scent — people would know where I was because of the scent I was wearing. This wasn’t something people were used to,” she said.
Her father recognized her talent and started introducing her to local suppliers that provided the raw material, which allowed her to mix perfumes.
“At university I needed to make a business model about something that I was passionate about, and I made a perfume business model,” she added.
She made a vanilla perfume that was sold at the campus store of Dar Al-Hekma University, where she studied for a year.
As every business needs to go through hardships to emerge as successful, Bogari said that she was unaware of many things, such as preparing legal documents and marketing products.
“Fortunately, there was a bazaar that took place during Ramadan at the Hilton and I used to participate in it. A lot of people tried my perfumes and liked them,” she said.
The brand has six types of bases and each base has a variety of perfumes: Oud, musk, vanilla, baby powder, floral and fruity. Bogari offers her suggestions on what kind of scents clients might prefer in order to create perfectly customized scents.
She designed the perfumes herself, and each is unique. “There is no doubt in the quality of the products. I sell two types of perfumes — the concentrated, to which I don’t add anything, and the eau de parfum.”
On the latter, she added: “I was not too keen on joining the spray perfume trend but a lot of customers said that they would love to spray my perfumes and that pushed me to do something that my clients want.”
She said that her biggest achievement was her ability to sell her perfumes in local stores while keeping quality consistent, adding that people know her by the outstanding quality and longevity of her perfumes. Currently, Bogari is showcasing her products in Crate, Homegrown Market and Bazaar, with plans for her own store in the pipeline.


Amira Al-Zuhair stars in Ramadan campaign for Loro Piana

Updated 04 February 2026
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Amira Al-Zuhair stars in Ramadan campaign for Loro Piana

  • Saudi French model wears a long olive-green dress
  • Begun the year with many high-profile appearances

DUBAI: Saudi French model Amira Al-Zuhair this week fronted a Ramadan campaign for Italian luxury brand Loro Piana.

In images shared on the brand’s Instagram page, Al-Zuhair wears a floor-length olive-green dress featuring a V-neckline, defined waist seam, and fluid cape-style sleeves falling from the shoulders.

According to the brand’s caption, the Ramadan capsule highlights “intricate detailing and the beauty of simplicity,” presenting a wardrobe of comfortable silhouettes.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by Loro Piana (@loropiana)

Shot in the warm, diffused light of a pottery artist’s studio, the campaign centers on elongated shapes, clean lines, and a muted palette of sage and sand tones.

Al-Zuhair has begun the year with a series of high-profile appearances. In addition to the Loro Piana campaign, she walked the runway at Jacquemus’ Fall/Winter 2026 “Le Palmier” show in Paris last month.

The event, staged at the Musee National Picasso, brought Simon Porte Jacquemus’ latest co-ed collection to life with playful yet sculptural silhouettes, blending mid-century couture references and 1990s sensibilities.

“Merci infiniment Simon. It was an honor to be part of this iconic show with such an amazing team, congratulations! Thank you for having me,” posted Al-Zuhair.

The model closed a segment of the show in an ensemble that captured the collection’s nod to both elegant simplicity and bold form.

She wore a black midi skirt with a structured blazer top with cutout detail at the back, cinched at the waist with a wide belt. The look was completed with a wide-brimmed hat that added a touch of drama.

The Jacquemus presentation, which also acted as the finale of Paris Men’s Fashion Week, wove together confetti-like motifs, geometric forms and a celebration of joie de vivre, encapsulating Jacquemus’ irreverent yet refined vision ahead of the upcoming couture season.

Al-Zuhair, born in Paris to a French mother and Saudi father, has appeared on the runway for renowned fashion houses.

She has walked for Missoni, Maison Alaia, Brunello Cucinelli, Balmain, Dolce & Gabbana, Giambattista Valli, Giorgio Armani, Elie Saab and more.

In addition to her runway appearances, Al-Zuhair has featured in campaigns for brands including Prada, Chanel and Carolina Herrera.