Perito Moreno Vetiver Mystique
Perito Moreno Vetiver Mystique
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Vetiver Mystique stands as a love letter to vintage perfumery—a long-lost art form that valued complexity, tradition, and a bit of smoky mystique. In this new creation, Mr. Nitish Dixit masterfully revives that old-world charm, fusing it with a spirited nod to the free-wheeling ethos of the ’70s. Think of it as slipping on a finely tailored blazer over a laid-back turtleneck-cultured, cool, and effortlessly inviting.
Each spritz begs you to linger in its story: citrus fields drenched in sunshine, secret gardens at dusk, and cozy salons where the night unfolds in whispers and laughter. Whether you’re a die-hard vetiver aficionado or simply someone with a taste for the finer things in life, Vetiver Mystique offers an odyssey of scent that’s as nostalgic as a favorite old photograph yet as vibrant and relevant as ever. Take a whiff, and you just might find yourself longing for that time when every new experience felt like a promise of something groovy, glamorous, and wondrously unexplored.
Top Notes
Amalfi Lemon, Black Pepper, Blood Orange, Calabrian Bergamot, Ginger-grass, Kaffir Lime Leaf, Lavender, Litsea Cubeba, May Chang, Neroli, Orange Blossom, Persian Lime, Pink Pepper, Rosemary, Sicilian Lemon, Sweet Orange, Thyme, Yellow Mandarin
Heart Notes
Blue Gum Eucalyptus, Bulgarian Rose, Damask Rose, Davana, Java Vetiver, Lavandin Grosso, Lemon Eucalyptus, Orange Blossom, Palmarosa, Siberian Fir, Sweet Marjoram, Vetiver Haiti, Brazilian Rosewood
Base Notes
Atlas Cedarwood, Benzoin Resinoid, Cedarwood Virginia, Clove Bud, Copaiba Balsam, Guaiacwood, Ho Wood, Musk accord, Nutmeg, Sandal-wood, Tonka Bean, Pipe Tobacco, Vanilla, Wormwood

Vetiver explosion! I actually get a healthy hit of eucalyptus alongside the big vetiver note, with bergamot playing an accompanying role in the open. Ginger comes onto the scene for me between the open and heart, but then the heart manages to get even greener with assorted evergreens, roses, and a very distinct plant that is driving me crazy for not being able to specifically call out -- it is wonderful; I just can't pin it down. I don't think it's the rosewood, maybe the marjoram? It's almost like some sort of lemongrass in my mind. The ginger again comes back to me acting as an olfactory bridge guiding me into the base where deeper woods smooth everything out (cedar baby!). It reminds me a lot of King's Empire at the finish in terms of the big cedar push, which is good because I loved that one too.