Sacre Tabac Sucre House Of Matriarch

For Men
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2017
Moderate
Sillage
Good
Longevity
Fall, Winter
Best Season
Evening
Best For

Fragrance Story

Sacre Tabac Sucre by House of Matriarch is a Oriental fragrance for men. The nose behind this fragrance is Christi Meshell.

Composition Profile

sweet 100%
fruity 85%
tobacco 70%
caramel 60%
vanilla 50%
fresh 40%
anis 35%

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

All Notes

Complete scent profile

Tobacco Tobacco
Molasses Molasses
Caramel Caramel
Green Apple Green Apple
Vanilla Vanilla
Red Apple Red Apple
Anise Anise
Unique Character

Sacre Tabac Sucre 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

Sacre Tabac Sucre 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 Sacre Tabac Sucre House Of Matriarch

Essence

This person is most closely defined by the Alchemist archetype-a seeker who transforms the raw into the refined, the mundane into the sacred. They are drawn to the mystical interplay of opposites, much like the fragrance they adore: Sacre Tabac Sucre by House of Matriarch, a blend of dark tobacco, honeyed vanilla, and sacramental resins. It is a scent that bridges the sensual and the spiritual, the profane and the divine. The Alchemist does not merely wear a perfume; they engage in a ritual, an act of personal transmutation.

Style & Aesthetic

Their wardrobe is a tapestry of textures-soft cashmere, aged leather, raw silk. They favor deep, warm hues: burgundy, charcoal, gold. There is an intentionality to their appearance, a sense that every piece has been chosen for its story, its resonance. They might wear an antique signet ring or a pendant with a cryptic symbol, not for show, but as a talisman.

Their living space is a sanctuary of curated chaos: shelves lined with leather-bound books, dried botanicals in glass jars, a vintage turntable spinning Miles Davis or Dead Can Dance. Candles burn low, casting flickering shadows on exposed brick or dark wood. It is a space that invites both contemplation and indulgence.

They are drawn to the esoteric-tarot, alchemical texts, perfumery, the art of distillation. They might study herbalism or collect rare incense. Their career, if conventional at all, is likely one that allows for creativity and autonomy: a perfumer, a writer, a curator, a sommelier. If trapped in a mundane job, they will ritualize it, turning the ordinary into something sacred-brewing coffee with ceremonial precision, transforming their workspace into an altar of inspiration.

They travel not for postcard views but for the scent of a Moroccan spice market, the hum of a Parisian absinthe bar, the silence of a mist-covered forest. Every journey is a pilgrimage, every experience a potential revelation.

Philosophy & Values

To them, life is an experiment in meaning. They are not content with surface pleasures-they seek depth, richness, the hidden alchemy in all things. They might quote Rumi or Jung in one breath and then revel in the decadence of a perfectly aged whiskey the next. Their philosophy is one of synthesis: they believe in the marriage of shadow and light, the sacred and the sensual.

They value authenticity above all else, despising anything artificial or mass-produced. Their tastes are curated, their pleasures deliberate. They are not afraid of contradictions-they embrace them. A well-worn leather journal filled with esoteric musings sits beside a collection of rare vinyl records. They are as likely to meditate at dawn as they are to lose themselves in a smoky jazz bar at midnight.

Relationships

They do not give their intimacy lightly. Their relationships are deep but few, built on shared intensity rather than casual camaraderie. They attract those who are drawn to mystery, who appreciate the slow unraveling of layers. Romantic partners must be both sensual and cerebral-someone who can discuss Nietzsche over a candlelit dinner and then lose themselves in passion without reservation.

Yet, their magnetism has a cost. They can be elusive, retreating into their inner world without warning. Their lovers may feel like initiates in a cult they do not fully understand, left to decipher cryptic moods and sudden withdrawals. They demand much but reveal little, and not everyone has the patience for such a dance.

Shadow

The Alchemist’s greatest strength-their ability to dwell in the liminal, to find meaning in the interplay of opposites-is also their greatest peril. When unbalanced, they may slip into extremes: either ascetic withdrawal or reckless indulgence.

In one phase, they might vanish into solitude, convinced that the world is too shallow to understand them. They become the Hermit, hoarding their wisdom like a dragon guarding gold, refusing to share their light. In another, they may succumb to the Hedonist, chasing sensation to fill an existential void-luxury, intoxication, fleeting lovers-only to wake with the bitter aftertaste of emptiness.

Their challenge is integration-to remain in the world without being consumed by it, to embrace pleasure without losing themselves in it.

Conclusion

This person is neither saint nor sinner, but both. They are the one who kneels in reverence before an altar of incense, then lights a cigarette with the same hand. They do not seek answers so much as they seek the alchemical process itself-the transformation, the becoming.

Their life is a slow-burning sacrament, a blend of shadow and gold. And when they wear Sacre Tabac Sucre, it is not just a fragrance-it is an invocation, a whispered promise that even the most earthly pleasures can be made holy.