Unveiled House Of Matriarch

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2013
Moderate
Sillage
Good
Longevity
Spring, Summer
Best Season
Casual
Best For

Fragrance Story

Unveiled by House of Matriarch is a Citrus fragrance for women and men. Unveiled was launched in 2013. The nose behind this fragrance is Christi Meshell.

Composition Profile

ozonic 100%
green 85%
aquatic 70%
white floral 60%
citrus 50%
yellow floral 40%
sweet 35%
warm spicy 30%
floral 25%
powdery 20%

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

Cucumber Cucumber
Neroli Neroli
Spices Spices
Orange Blossom Orange Blossom
Lime Blossom Lime Blossom
Mimosa Mimosa
Amber Amber
Agarwood (Oud) Agarwood (Oud)
Citrus Leaves Citrus Leaves
Galbanum Galbanum
Woody Notes Woody Notes

Character Profile

The House Of Matriarch Admirer Archetype: Portrait of Unveiled House Of Matriarch

Essence

To wear Unveiled by House of Matriarch is to embrace an olfactory paradox-a fragrance that is at once ethereal and grounding, sacred and sensual, delicate yet commanding. The person who chooses this scent is not merely selecting a perfume; they are declaring an allegiance to a certain way of being. They are, above all, a Mystic.

Relationships

In love and friendship, they are intense but not always easy. They crave deep connection, yet their need for solitude can make them seem elusive. Partners must understand that their retreats into silence are not rejection but a necessary return to the self. When they love, they do so with a quiet fervor-less through grand gestures than through moments of profound presence.

Yet their shadow emerges here as well. Their idealism can make them impatient with those who do not share their depth. They may withdraw from relationships that feel too mundane, or they may project their spiritual longings onto a partner, expecting them to be a soulmate in the most exalted sense-only to be disappointed by human frailty.

Shadow

When unbalanced, the Mystic risks becoming either the Exile or the Fanatic. The Exile drifts too far from the world, losing touch with the grounding forces of daily life. They may grow melancholic, feeling alienated from a society they perceive as shallow. The Fanatic, on the other hand, clings too tightly to their vision, becoming rigid in their beliefs and dismissive of those who do not follow their path.

Yet in their highest expression, the Mystic is a guide-not by preaching, but by embodying a way of being that invites others to look deeper. They remind us that beauty is not merely in the object but in the act of perception itself.

Conclusion

Unveiled is not for the casual wearer. It is for those who see fragrance as ritual, as an invocation. The person who wears it is both a poet and a priestess, a wanderer between worlds. They are flawed, yes-prone to solitude, occasional hubris, or the ache of unanswerable longing. But they are also luminous, carrying within them the quiet certainty that there is more to life than what meets the eye.

And so they move through the world, leaving traces of incense and amber in their wake-a fleeting reminder that mystery still exists, if only we pause to breathe it in.