Raining Petals
$595
Dense and unapologetically expensive…
Flowers don’t smell like this on the bush.
Cut them, put them in a vase, and they smell like flowers. Press them against skin – warm skin, skin that has its own temperature and chemistry and smell – and something else happens. The flower stops being a flower and starts being something between a flower and a person.
Raining Petals is composed around that moment of contact.
Most florals in perfumery are kept at a safe distance – suspended in alcohol, sprayed into the air, experienced as something external to the body, floating around you. Here, there’s no distance. The orange blossom, tuberose, sambac jasmine, and ylang ylang bloom directly on skin and stay there, and what they become over the next several hours depends on who is wearing them.
The indolic edge of orange blossom – that saline, slightly animalic quality that makes it the most skin-like floral in existence – surfaces fully, without alcohol burning it off first. The tuberose turns fleshy and humid in a way that a spray never allows. The sambac jasmine, in absolute form rather than diluted, stops smelling like a flower and starts smelling like warm skin that has spent a long time near flowers.
Costus and angelica root buzz at the border between botanical and human – faintly earthy, faintly animalic. Magnolia cuts through periodically, crisp and citrus-edged, and keeps the composition breathing.
Underneath it all: Cambodian oud infused with musk, bare and balsamic, not there to be noticed but to give the orange blossom and tuberose and jasmine something warm and human to settle into.
And over it all, a downpour of purple rain. Vintage oud, naturally aged oud, incense-grade, sinking-grade West Malaysian oud you cannot hope to distill today. With its purple resinous profile permeating the fragrance, it smells like the flowers grew from the centennial agarwood itself.
At 100% concentration there’s no alcohol, no diffusion, nothing evaporating before it reaches you. One drop and the entire composition is on your skin – not unfolding in sequence, but popping all at once. What changes over hours is not the attar. It’s what your body does to it – which means no two wearings are identical, and no two people smell it the same way.
This is not a perfume you wear to be noticed across the room, but one someone discovers when they are close enough that distance no longer exists.




