Note: Please understand that this website is not affiliated with the Dana company in any way, it is only a reference page for collectors and those who have enjoyed the Dana fragrances.


The goal of this website is to show the present owners of the Dana company how much we miss the discontinued classics and hopefully, if they see that there is enough interest and demand, they will bring back your favorite perfume!


Please leave a comment below (for example: of why you liked the perfume, describe the scent, time period or age you wore it, who gave it to you or what occasion, any specific memories), who knows, perhaps someone from the company might see it.

Showing posts with label Emir. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Emir. Show all posts

Monday, May 11, 2015

Dana Perfume Tester Racks

Great looking tester racks for Dana perfumes, made up of black Bakelite. Perfumes shown are: Emir, Tabu, 20 Carats, Platine, and Ambush



Tuesday, January 13, 2015

Emir by Dana c1935

Emir by Dana was launched in 1935 in France, a decade defined by the pursuit of elegance and escape. The world was still in the throes of the Great Depression, and the opulent fantasy of the East captivated the imagination of the West. Perfume houses, ever attuned to cultural fascinations, often turned to exoticism to craft fragrances that transported the wearer to distant lands of wealth, intrigue, and splendor. Emir was Dana’s answer to this longing for luxury—a scent steeped in mystery, inspired by the grandeur of the Persian courts, and designed to evoke the golden age of perfumery.

The name Emir was a deliberate and evocative choice. Derived from Arabic (أمير, pronounced “ay-MEER”), the word means “prince” or “commander.” It carries connotations of nobility, power, and a lineage of rulers who presided over grand courts filled with silks, jewels, and, most importantly, exquisite fragrances. Dana’s founder, Javier Serra, understood that perfume was more than a scent—it was a gateway to fantasy. A 1949 newspaper article recounted how Dana sought inspiration in the courts of Persian Emirs, where perfume was not merely a luxury but a treasure, a gift worthy of royalty. It was whispered that a fragrance bearing the Emir’s name could work magic, weaving an aura of enchantment around its wearer. "You can almost believe, as you wear the Emir’s perfume, that at night—anything can happen."

Women of the United States had to visit Cuban shops in order to obtain the perfume, which was unavailable in America at that time. By the time Emir was introduced to the American market in 1939, the world had endured the devastation of the Great Depression, which ushered in a period of both uncertainty and hope. Women, many of whom had to economize or do without, hungered for beauty, for indulgence, for the ability to dream again. A perfume named Emir would have embodied these desires, offering a touch of the exotic, a return to old-world grandeur, and a sense of opulence that had been missing for years.