Skip to product information
1 of 1

Lorenzo Pazzaglia

Lorenzo Pazzaglia Incense noturno

Lorenzo Pazzaglia Incense noturno

Perfume Extract

Regular price 1.189,00 kr
Regular price Sale price 1.189,00 kr
Sale Sold out
Taxes included. Shipping calculated at checkout.
Size

View full details
  • This time Lorenzo steps out of his comfort zone – the fruity, immediately appealing joy-filled style that expresses smiles and joy of life.
    He moves into darker territories, and he does it in his usual way – on tiptoe – experimenting with something new, but no less captivating.

    Of course, Lorenzo's sunny mind could not be completely hidden, which is why the opening of Incenso Notturno is not as nocturnal as the name suggests.

    Citrus fruits combined with elemi resin, which also has citrusy undertones, and a touch of black pepper immediately give the scent an incense-like but bright character.
    The development is slow – and from the light comes the night – through woody, earthy and, of course, incense-filled chords.

    It becomes nocturnal and mysterious, with an earthy and peppery character – like a winter walk in a cold medieval town.
    A cold, damp church room, now empty, where the scent of the wood of the pews and confessional mingles with the scent of burning candles and incense. The cold, damp walls give off their characteristic scent.

    The warm balsamic part is perfectly balanced by the moist, earthy patchouli – and the result is striking and devilishly gothic.

  • Notes

    Top note: white pepper, elemi resin, lemon peel, bergamot

    Heart note: black pepper, patchouli, oud (agarwood), cinnamon, nutmeg, damask rose

    Base note: incense, cedarwood, sandalwood, vanilla, amber, musk

Lorenzo Pazzaglia

Lorenzo grew up surrounded by the smells of his father's kitchen. He learned to recognize them and took delight in cooking. He became a boss. He loved and craved, dreamed and fantasized about all the scents of this land. So Lorenzo made up his mind to study them, to shape and create, releasing them around the world so that beauty can stem from virtue rather than wealth.

More from Lorenzo Pazzaglia