Coatlicue Azteque

Unisex
Year:

Fragrance Story

Coatlicue by Azteque is a Woody Spicy fragrance for women and men. Coatlicue was launched in 2020. The nose behind this fragrance is Jacopo Luccato. Top notes are Cumin, Ash and Black Currant; middle notes are Amber, Grapes and Hay; base notes are Incense, Mahogany and Precious Woods.

Composition Profile

woody 100%
amber 85%
fruity 70%
smoky 60%
fresh spicy 50%
green 40%
animalic 35%
herbal 30%

About the Perfumer

Jacopo Luccato

Jacopo Luccato

Jacopo Luccato is a perfumer for the Azteque brand, drawing inspiration from Mesoamerican mythology. His creations include Chicomecoatl, Coatlicue, and Tlaloc, named after Aztec deities and natural elements. Luccato's work blends earthy, spicy, and resinous notes to evoke ancient rituals.

Fragrance Notes

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Cumin Cumin
Ash Ash
Black Currant Black Currant

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Amber Amber
Grapes Grapes
Hay Hay

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Incense Incense
Mahogany Mahogany
Precious Woods Precious Woods
Unique Character

Coatlicue Azteque by Azteque offers a distinctive olfactory experience that stands out from other fragrances in its category.

Artisanal Creation

Crafted with the finest ingredients and a blend of traditional and modern perfumery techniques, this fragrance represents the pinnacle of the perfumer's art.

Signature Style

Coatlicue Azteque embodies the distinctive style of Azteque while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.

Character Profile

The Alchemist Archetype: Portrait of Coatlicue Azteque

Essence

The one who chooses Coatlicue Azteque is no mere admirer of fragrance-they are a seeker, a transformer, a wielder of symbols. Their soul resonates with the Alchemist, the Jungian archetype that embodies metamorphosis, the fusion of opposites, and the relentless pursuit of hidden truths. Like the Aztec goddess Coatlicue-mother of gods and devourer of chaos-they dwell in the liminal space between creation and destruction, order and wildness. They do not merely wear a scent; they invoke an essence, a ritual of self-reinvention.

Style & Aesthetic

Their appearance is a carefully curated paradox-ancient and modern, structured yet untamed. They favor textures that tell a story: weathered leather, raw silk, oxidized silver. Their wardrobe may carry hints of ceremonial influence-a draped shawl, an amulet tucked beneath a tailored coat. They do not follow trends; they sculpt an aesthetic that feels like an incantation.

Colors are deep and elemental-charcoal, blood-red, obsidian black. They appreciate craftsmanship, but not for mere luxury-they seek objects that feel imbued with intention, as if they were once part of some forgotten rite.

They thrive in environments that mirror their inner world-dimly lit libraries, abandoned ruins, midnight gardens. Their home is a sanctuary of curiosities: dried herbs in glass jars, antique blades displayed as art, books with cracked spines and underlined passages. They may practice a craft-pottery, tarot, metalwork-not as a hobby, but as a sacred act.

Professionally, they are drawn to roles that allow them to mediate between worlds: therapists, perfumers, historians, or even rebels who dismantle systems to rebuild them anew. Routine suffocates them; they need work that feels like a calling, not a duty.

Philosophy & Values

To them, life is not static but a crucible. They believe in the necessity of decay for rebirth, in the alchemical marriage of shadow and light. Their philosophy is one of synthesis-they reject rigid binaries, seeing wisdom in contradictions. They may be drawn to esoteric traditions, mythologies, or the occult, not as superstition but as maps of the psyche.

Yet, their reverence for transformation can make them restless. They distrust permanence, sometimes sabotaging stability in pursuit of the next evolution. Their shadow whispers that stagnation is death-but this very fear can become a self-fulfilling prophecy, leaving them unmoored.

Relationships

Their magnetism is undeniable, but their connections are rarely superficial. They attract those who sense their depth, yet few truly understand them. Their closest bonds are with fellow seekers-artists, mystics, philosophers-those who speak in symbols and are unafraid of the dark.

Yet, their intensity can be isolating. They demand transformation from others as they do from themselves, and not all are willing to be remade in their fire. Some may find them cryptic, even manipulative-their shadow side wields influence like a subtle poison, testing loyalties, provoking crises to force growth.

Shadow

Their greatest strength-their ability to transmute pain into wisdom-is also their peril. When unbalanced, they become the Sorcerer, wielding knowledge as a weapon. They may grow cynical, seeing people as mere ingredients in their grand experiment. Their hunger for transformation can turn destructive, leaving scorched earth where they sought renewal.

Yet, in their highest expression, they are the true alchemist-turning lead into gold, not in a flask, but in the soul. They understand that to wear Coatlicue Azteque is to embrace the serpent and the skull, the creator and the destroyer. And in that embrace, they find not answers, but the eternal question-the one that keeps them burning.