The Smell Of Love Miguel Matos

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2024

At a glance

Is The Smell Of Love Miguel Matos worth trying?

The Smell of Love by Miguel Matos is a Chypre Floral fragrance for women and men.

Best match
Evening, Special Occasion wear in Spring, Fall
Performance feel
Good longevity with Moderate sillage
Signature profile
earthy, iris, powdery with Cumin, Bergamot, Mushroom

The first impression

The Smell of Love by Miguel Matos is a Chypre Floral fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. The Smell of Love was launched in 2024. The nose behind this fragrance is Miguel Matos. Top notes are Cumin and Bergamot; middle notes are Mushroom, Patchouli and Tuberose; base notes are Iris, Leather, White Musk, Musk and Sandalwood.

What shapes the scent

earthy 100%
iris 85%
powdery 70%
leather 60%
animalic 50%
violet 40%
fresh spicy 35%
mossy 30%
woody 25%
musky 20%

The perfumer behind it

Miguel Matos

Miguel Matos

Miguel Matos is a prolific perfumer with creations for A13, Astrophil & Stella, Azman, and Bruno Acampora, including Out In The Open, Sweet Pulp, Killer Vavoom, and multiple Citrea Prochyta and Freak Chic editions. His work often explores bold, avant-garde themes with rich and intense compositions. He is known for pushing boundaries in contemporary perfumery.

Notes pyramid

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Cumin Cumin
Bergamot Bergamot

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Mushroom Mushroom
Patchouli Patchouli
Tuberose Tuberose

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Iris Iris
Leather Leather
White Musk White Musk
Musk Musk
Sandalwood Sandalwood

The mood it creates

The Mystic Archetype: Portrait of The Smell Of Love Miguel Matos

Essence

The Smell of Love embodies the Mystic archetype, navigating the thin veil between the earthly and the ethereal. Cumin and bergamot create an opening that feels both sacred and carnal, while mushroom and tuberose suggest a mind attuned to the mycelial networks of meaning beneath everyday life. This is a fragrance for those who seek love in its most expansive form.

They are the walker between worlds-the iris and leather grounding them in the physical, the musk and sandalwood lifting them toward the ineffable. For them, every scent is a prayer.

Style & Aesthetic

Their style is a study in deliberate ambiguity. Flowing linen shirts that might be ritual garments or simply fashion, boots worn from both city streets and forest paths. The earthy patchouli and mushroom notes manifest in a palette of forest-floor browns and the violet-gray of twilight.

They surround themselves with symbols: a bowl of cumin seeds on the altar, a single tuberose in a leather-wrapped vase. The sandalwood note speaks to well-worn malas or worry beads.

Philosophy & Values

They believe in the holiness of contradiction. The cumin's warmth and the bergamot's brightness mirror their faith that divinity lives in the meeting of opposites-sweet and sour, light and dark, love and loss. The mushroom's earthy funk is as sacred to them as the iris's powdery purity.

For them, love is not a destination but a practice, a daily realignment toward connection. The leather and musk suggest this work is both bodily and transcendent.

Relationships

They draw people in like incense smoke-subtly, irresistibly. Their friendships are deep wells, the kind where silence is as nourishing as speech. The tuberose's headiness hints at a romantic intensity, but the leather reminds that they value autonomy as much as union.

In intimacy, they are pilgrims. They approach each touch as both discovery and homecoming, the white musk a promise of something both familiar and endlessly new.

Lifestyle

Their days are rituals. Mornings might involve grinding cumin for tea while reciting fragments of poetry, evenings in tracing the scent of mushroom after rain. The bergamot's freshness speaks to predawn meditations, the sandalwood to late-night journaling.

They thrive in thresholds: doorways at sunset, the edge where city gives way to wildness, the moment between waking and dream.

Shadow

Their mysticism can tip into escapism. The mushroom's earthiness hints at a tendency to prefer the hidden to the visible, while the animalic notes suggest a fear of being fully present in the body. They risk loving the idea of love more than the messy reality.

There's also a shadow of secrecy-the cumin's spice implies they might hoard their revelations rather than share them.

Conclusion

The Smell of Love is for those who sense the sacred in the soil. It captures the Mystic's journey-not toward answers, but toward deeper questions. Wear this when you need to remember that every breath is an act of communion, and that love, like scent, is the original invisible thread that binds all things.