Maracaibo Mutis Nueva Granada
Fragrance Story
Maracaibo by Mutis Nueva Granada is a fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Maracaibo was launched in 2023. The nose behind this fragrance is Chris Maurice. Top notes are Piña Colada and Cinnamon; middle notes are Coconut, Coconut Milk and Caramel; base notes are Watery Notes, Earthy Notes, Sandalwood, Vanilla, Vetiver, Cedar and Musk.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Chris Maurice
Chris Maurice is a perfumer with a wide-ranging portfolio that includes work for Aqualis, Artal Perfumes, Assaf, Astrophil & Stella, Azman, and Bey Parfum. His creations include Egoli, Forbidden Rose, Darley, Love Is Lost, Moonage Daydream, Riad Jasmine, Song For A Wanderer, and Abyssoria. His style varies from floral and romantic to dark and mysterious.
Fragrance Notes
Character Profile
The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Maracaibo Mutis Nueva Granada
Essence
The one who chooses Maracaibo Mutis Nueva Granada is no mere wearer of fragrance-they are a seeker of transformation. The Alchemist archetype defines them, for they are drawn to the hidden, the rare, the intoxicatingly complex. Like the perfumer who distills the essence of exotic woods, spices, and resins, they too seek to refine raw experience into something transcendent. They are not content with the obvious; they crave depth, mystery, and the alchemical marriage of opposites.
This is a person who believes in the power of symbols, in the way scent can evoke memory, desire, and even destiny. They do not merely wear a fragrance-they inhabit it, as though it were a second skin woven from dreams and whispered histories.
To encounter them is to step into a world where every detail is charged with meaning. They move through life as though it were a ritual, seeking the sublime in the smallest things. But the true test of their alchemy is whether they can transmute their own shadows-whether they can learn that even the most exquisite fragrance must, eventually, fade.
And perhaps that is the final lesson they must face: that beauty is fleeting, and the greatest transformation is the one that leads not to perfection, but to acceptance.
Style & Aesthetic
Their world is one of deliberate curation. They surround themselves with objects that tell a story-antique books with cracked spines, hand-carved wooden boxes, dark velvet drapes that swallow light. Their taste leans toward the baroque, but never the gaudy; there is always restraint beneath the richness. They might wear tailored suits with a single unusual detail-a lapel pin of an obscure sigil, or a pocket square in a shade just slightly too deep for convention.
Their philosophy is one of becoming. They do not believe in fixed identities, only in the endless metamorphosis of the self. They are drawn to esoteric traditions, not out of superstition, but because they see in them the same principles that govern their own life: the transformation of base matter into gold, of chaos into meaning.
Relationships
They do not love lightly, nor do they love many. Their relationships are intense, layered, like the fragrance they wear-opening with boldness, revealing hidden facets over time, lingering long after the moment has passed. They are magnetic, drawing others in with their quiet confidence and the sense that they know something most do not.
Yet this same depth can become a barrier. Their love of mystery sometimes leads them to withhold, to cultivate an air of inscrutability even when vulnerability would serve them better. They fear the mundane, and so they may sabotage relationships that threaten to become too ordinary, too predictable.
Shadow
The Alchemist’s brilliance has its dark twin. Their pursuit of the extraordinary can tip into obsession-collecting not for joy, but for the sake of possession. They may disdain what they perceive as vulgar or common, forgetting that even gold was once ordinary ore.
Their greatest flaw is a quiet arrogance. They believe their refined tastes make them superior, and this belief can isolate them. They may dismiss others as shallow, not realizing that their own depth sometimes becomes a prison.