Marta House Of Gozdawa

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2015

At a glance

Is Marta House Of Gozdawa worth trying?

Marta by House of Gozdawa is a Woody Spicy fragrance for women and men.

Best match
Evening wear in Fall, Winter
Performance feel
Good longevity with Moderate sillage
Signature profile
aromatic, fresh spicy, warm spicy with Rose Geranium, Black Pepper, Pelargonium

The first impression

Marta by House of Gozdawa is a Woody Spicy fragrance for women and men. Marta was launched in 2015. The nose behind this fragrance is Agata Karolina.

What shapes the scent

aromatic 100%
fresh spicy 85%
warm spicy 70%
rose 60%
floral 50%
amber 40%
soft spicy 35%
woody 30%
earthy 25%

The perfumer behind it

Agata Karolina

Agata Karolina

Agata Karolina is a perfumer known for her work with House of Gozdawa, where she has created a diverse range of fragrances. Her style often balances bold, evocative themes with refined composition, as seen in creations like Ghost and Guilty Pleasures. Notable works from her portfolio include Aga, Albert, Andrea, Hel, Marta, and Simo, each reflecting a distinct narrative approach.

Notes pyramid

All Notes

Complete scent profile

Rose Geranium Rose Geranium
Black Pepper Black Pepper
Pelargonium Pelargonium
Carnation Carnation
Baie Rose Baie Rose
Vetiver Vetiver
Myrrh Myrrh

The mood it creates

The Mystic Archetype: Portrait of Marta House Of Gozdawa

Essence

Marta channels the Mystic archetype, a wanderer between worlds who finds divinity in spice and smoke. The fragrance begins with ritualistic clarity - rose geranium and black pepper like sacred herbs scattered on coals. Myrrh's ecclesiastical resonance meets pelargonium's green vitality, creating a scent that feels both ancient and urgently present.

This is a perfume for those who perceive the thin places where mundane and magical intersect. Vetiver roots the composition in earth while baie rose (pink pepper) lends an ethereal shimmer, mirroring the Mystic's ability to straddle planes. The overall effect is of incense rising through a medieval herb garden at dusk.

Style & Aesthetic

They wear layered linen and wool in natural dyes, with silver rings on every finger. Their home mixes monastic simplicity (whitewashed walls, beeswax candles) with cabinets of curiosities containing desert bones and pressed carnations. A single sprig of dried geranium hangs above their bed for protection.

Philosophy & Values

They believe truth reveals itself through sensory devotion - the way pepper stings the tongue or myrrh resin sticks to fingers. Silence is their scripture, observation their prayer. The Mystic values intuition over doctrine, finding more wisdom in a handful of aromatic spices than in libraries of theology.

Relationships

They attract souls hungry for meaning but struggle with permanence. Romantic partners must understand their need for solitary walks at dawn. Their friendships are deep but intermittent, like the reappearance of a comet. When they love, it's with carnation's clove-like intensity - warm yet slightly astringent.

Lifestyle

Dawn meditation with a drop of perfume on the third eye. Days spent wildcrafting herbs or visiting obscure chapels. They journal in cipher and brew tea from foraged plants. The Mystic's calendar follows lunar cycles rather than months, their rhythms dictated by inner tides rather than clocks.

Shadow

Their detachment can become emotional nomadism, using spiritual seeking to avoid earthly commitments. The vetiver's earthiness warns against floating too long in the ether. Their greatest test is learning to fully inhabit the body while keeping the soul's vision clear.

Conclusion

Marta is the scent of a pilgrim's satchel - holding dried flowers, well-worn prayer beads, and a small knife for harvesting sacred resins. To wear it is to carry an olfactory talisman, a reminder that mystery breathes just beneath the surface of ordinary moments.