Mother Of All Roses House Of Matriarch

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2023
Moderate
Sillage
Moderate
Longevity
Spring
Best Season
Casual
Best For

Fragrance Story

Mother Of All Roses by House of Matriarch is a fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Mother Of All Roses was launched in 2023. The nose behind this fragrance is Christi Meshell. Top notes are White Rose and Taif Rose; middle notes are Wild Rose, Rose Petals, Tincture of Rose and Rose Leaf; base notes are Bakhoor and Rose.

Composition Profile

rose 100%
green 85%
floral 70%

About the Perfumer

Christi Meshell

Christi Meshell

Christi Meshell is the founder and perfumer of House of Matriarch, a niche fragrance house based in the Pacific Northwest. Her extensive catalog includes A World Of Blue, Albatross, Alpha, Amanita, Amberchris, Ambre Vie, and Antimony. Her scents are known for their natural and organic ingredients, often inspired by the landscapes of the region.

Fragrance Notes

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

White Rose White Rose
Taif Rose Taif Rose

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Wild Rose Wild Rose
Rose Petals Rose Petals
Tincture of Rose Tincture of Rose
Rose Leaf Rose Leaf

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Bakhoor Bakhoor
Rose Rose
Unique Character

Mother Of All Roses House Of Matriarch by House of Matriarch 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

Mother Of All Roses House Of Matriarch embodies the distinctive style of House of Matriarch while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.

Character Profile

The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Mother Of All Roses House Of Matriarch

Essence

The Essence of Their Being
To wear Mother Of All Roses by House of Matriarch is to embrace an opulent, almost sacred sensuality-a fragrance that is at once tender and commanding, like the bloom of a rose that demands reverence. The person who cherishes this scent is one who worships beauty, not as a passive admirer but as an active participant in its creation. They are, above all, an embodiment of The Lover archetype-driven by passion, devotion, and an unshakable belief in the transformative power of deep feeling.

Their life is an altar to aesthetic and emotional intensity. They do not merely exist; they experience, with every sense heightened. The world is richer to them because they refuse to see it as anything less than a tapestry of meaning. Yet, this very intensity is both their greatest strength and their most perilous weakness.

Tastes & Style: A Life in Full Bloom
Their surroundings mirror their inner world-luxurious, but never garish. They favor textures that beg to be touched: velvet, silk, aged leather. Their home is a sanctuary of curated beauty, where even the smallest object holds significance-a vintage perfume bottle, a pressed flower in a book, a handwritten letter kept for decades. They are drawn to art that stirs the soul: Renaissance paintings, Romantic poetry, the melancholic swell of a cello.

In dress, they favor timeless elegance with a whisper of decadence. A well-tailored coat, a single striking piece of jewelry, fabrics that move like liquid-these are their armor and their vulnerability. They understand that beauty is power, and they wield it with deliberation.

Philosophy & Values: The Religion of Feeling
To them, love is not merely an emotion but a philosophy. They believe in the sacredness of connection-whether to a person, an idea, or a moment. They are not content with superficial bonds; they crave depth, intensity, a merging of souls. Their values are rooted in authenticity-they despise pretense, yet they themselves are not immune to the seduction of illusion when it serves their romantic ideals.

They see life as a series of meaningful encounters, each one a potential revelation. This can make them profoundly empathetic, attuned to the unspoken needs of others. But it can also make them possessive, mistaking obsession for devotion.

Relationships: The Flame and the Burn
In love, they are both the devotee and the high priest. They do not love lightly; when they commit, it is with a fervor that borders on the religious. Their partners are often swept into their world of heightened emotion, where every glance is charged, every silence pregnant with meaning.

Yet, this very intensity can suffocate. Their shadow emerges when love becomes control, when admiration turns into a demand for reciprocation. They may mistake longing for love, or confuse passion with permanence. Their greatest fear is not loss, but indifference-to be forgotten is a fate worse than betrayal.

Lifestyle: Between Ecstasy and Melancholy
They live deliberately, seeking out experiences that resonate with their inner mythos. A quiet dinner by candlelight holds as much weight as a grand journey. They are drawn to places steeped in history-old gardens, dimly lit libraries, cities where the past lingers like a ghost.

Yet, their pursuit of beauty can become escapism. When reality fails to meet their ideals, they may retreat into fantasy, or worse-resent the world for its mundanity. Their shadow whispers that nothing will ever be enough, that every rose must eventually wilt.

The Shadow: When Devotion Becomes Possession
The Lover’s greatest danger is the belief that love must be all-consuming. In their hunger for depth, they may mistake toxicity for passion, chaos for vitality. They may cling to what should be released, or demand more than another can give. Their challenge is to love without suffocating, to cherish without claiming.

Yet, even in their excesses, there is something noble-a refusal to live half-heartedly. They would rather burn than fade, and in that fire, they find both their ruin and their redemption.

Conclusion: The Eternal Rose
They are the keeper of beauty, the worshiper of love, the one who remembers what others forget-that life is fleeting, and so we must make it exquisite. Their flaw is their grandeur; their salvation is their capacity to feel deeply. In the end, they are like the rose in their favorite fragrance: breathtaking, fragile, and utterly unforgettable.

The Essence of Their Being
To wear Mother Of All Roses by House of Matriarch is to embrace an opulent, almost sacred sensuality-a fragrance that is at once tender and commanding, like the bloom of a rose that demands reverence. The person who cherishes this scent is one who worships beauty, not as a passive admirer but as an active participant in its creation. They are, above all, an embodiment of The Lover archetype-driven by passion, devotion, and an unshakable belief in the transformative power of deep feeling.

Their life is an altar to aesthetic and emotional intensity. They do not merely exist; they experience, with every sense heightened. The world is richer to them because they refuse to see it as anything less than a tapestry of meaning. Yet, this very intensity is both their greatest strength and their most perilous weakness.

Tastes & Style: A Life in Full Bloom
Their surroundings mirror their inner world-luxurious, but never garish. They favor textures that beg to be touched: velvet, silk, aged leather. Their home is a sanctuary of curated beauty, where even the smallest object holds significance-a vintage perfume bottle, a pressed flower in a book, a handwritten letter kept for decades. They are drawn to art that stirs the soul: Renaissance paintings, Romantic poetry, the melancholic swell of a cello.

In dress, they favor timeless elegance with a whisper of decadence. A well-tailored coat, a single striking piece of jewelry, fabrics that move like liquid-these are their armor and their vulnerability. They understand that beauty is power, and they wield it with deliberation.

Philosophy & Values: The Religion of Feeling
To them, love is not merely an emotion but a philosophy. They believe in the sacredness of connection-whether to a person, an idea, or a moment. They are not content with superficial bonds; they crave depth, intensity, a merging of souls. Their values are rooted in authenticity-they despise pretense, yet they themselves are not immune to the seduction of illusion when it serves their romantic ideals.

They see life as a series of meaningful encounters, each one a potential revelation. This can make them profoundly empathetic, attuned to the unspoken needs of others. But it can also make them possessive, mistaking obsession for devotion.

Relationships: The Flame and the Burn
In love, they are both the devotee and the high priest. They do not love lightly; when they commit, it is with a fervor that borders on the religious. Their partners are often swept into their world of heightened emotion, where every glance is charged, every silence pregnant with meaning.

Yet, this very intensity can suffocate. Their shadow emerges when love becomes control, when admiration turns into a demand for reciprocation. They may mistake longing for love, or confuse passion with permanence. Their greatest fear is not loss, but indifference-to be forgotten is a fate worse than betrayal.

Lifestyle: Between Ecstasy and Melancholy
They live deliberately, seeking out experiences that resonate with their inner mythos. A quiet dinner by candlelight holds as much weight as a grand journey. They are drawn to places steeped in history-old gardens, dimly lit libraries, cities where the past lingers like a ghost.

Yet, their pursuit of beauty can become escapism. When reality fails to meet their ideals, they may retreat into fantasy, or worse-resent the world for its mundanity. Their shadow whispers that nothing will ever be enough, that every rose must eventually wilt.

The Shadow: When Devotion Becomes Possession
The Lover’s greatest danger is the belief that love must be all-consuming. In their hunger for depth, they may mistake toxicity for passion, chaos for vitality. They may cling to what should be released, or demand more than another can give. Their challenge is to love without suffocating, to cherish without claiming.

Yet, even in their excesses, there is something noble-a refusal to live half-heartedly. They would rather burn than fade, and in that fire, they find both their ruin and their redemption.

Conclusion: The Eternal Rose
They are the keeper of beauty, the worshiper of love, the one who remembers what others forget-that life is fleeting, and so we must make it exquisite. Their flaw is their grandeur; their salvation is their capacity to feel deeply. In the end, they are like the rose in their favorite fragrance: breathtaking, fragile, and utterly unforgettable.