Zohar Ayala Moriel
At a glance
Is Zohar Ayala Moriel worth trying?
Zohar by Ayala Moriel is a Floral fragrance for women.
- Best match
- Casual, Office wear in Spring, Summer
- Performance feel
- Moderate longevity with Moderate sillage
- Signature profile
- white floral, citrus, tuberose with Bitter Orange, Neroli, Tuberose
The first impression
Zohar by Ayala Moriel is a Floral fragrance for women. The nose behind this fragrance is Ayala Moriel.
What shapes the scent
The perfumer behind it
Ayala Moriel
Ayala Moriel is an independent perfumer and natural fragrance specialist based in Vancouver, Canada. Her olfactory style emphasizes botanical ingredients and complex, evocative compositions that often draw from nature, art, and cultural traditions. Notable creations from her catalog include the resinous and woody <3, the dark and licorice-forward Black Licorice, and the seasonal, earthy Autumn. Her work has helped define the modern natural perfumery movement, inspiring a deeper appreciation for plant-based scent artistry.
Notes pyramid
The mood it creates
The Mystic Archetype: Portrait of Zohar Ayala Moriel
Essence
Zohar embodies the Mystic archetype, a seeker of hidden truths and transcendent beauty. The fragrance's luminous blend of neroli, jasmine, and tuberose suggests a soul attuned to the sacred in the mundane, while the honeyed amber base whispers of ancient rituals. This is a scent for those who move through the world as if it were a temple, finding divinity in sunlight filtering through petals.
Style & Aesthetic
They favor flowing silhouettes in ivory or unbleached linen, garments that catch the light like the fragrance's citrus top notes. Their aesthetic balances purity (white florals) with depth (animalic honey), mirroring a life that honors both asceticism and sensual pleasure. Every detail-a hand-carved wooden comb, a single bloom in a clay vase-speaks of intentional simplicity.
Philosophy & Values
For them, beauty is a path to enlightenment. The interplay of green freshness and sweet amber in Zohar reflects their belief in duality: light needs shadow to be meaningful. They value stillness, often pausing to inhale the scent of rain on warm stone or the first orange blossoms of spring.
Relationships
They attract kindred spirits through quiet magnetism rather than overt charm. Romantic partners describe their love as both tender (jasmine) and fiercely loyal (tuberose). Friends seek them for counsel, drawn by their ability to listen deeply-a skill honed through years of observing nature's subtle languages.
Lifestyle
Mornings begin with meditation, the citrus notes of their perfume merging with steam from herbal tea. They might work as a ceramicist or herbalist, trades that honor the alchemy of raw materials. Evenings are for translating dreams into poetry by candlelight, the honeyed dry-down of Zohar lingering on their wrists.
Shadow
Their quest for transcendence can become escapism; the animalic base warns against denying earthly needs. At times, they withdraw too completely, mistaking solitude for wisdom. The challenge lies in grounding their visions into tangible acts of connection.
Conclusion
Zohar is the olfactory equivalent of a prayer whispered at dawn. It captures the Mystic's journey-not toward some distant heaven, but into the radiant heart of the present moment, where every breath carries the promise of revelation.