The Story
Why it exists.
Principalities takes its name from the second lowest choir of angels in the traditional celestial hierarchy. The name evokes a sense of unseen forces arranging the elements of the physical world, a role this fragrance attempts to capture. The bridge between the material and the divine, made wearable: that is what the composition aims to achieve. Drawing on traditions where sacred fragrance and smoke have served as a point of contact between the material and the divine, this fragrance embodies that concept. It is the bridge made tangible through scent, an invitation into something larger than the everyday.
If this were a song
Community picks
Intro
M83
The Beginning
Principalities takes its name from the second lowest choir of angels in the traditional celestial hierarchy. The name evokes a sense of unseen forces arranging the elements of the physical world, a role this fragrance attempts to capture. The bridge between the material and the divine, made wearable: that is what the composition aims to achieve. Drawing on traditions where sacred fragrance and smoke have served as a point of contact between the material and the divine, this fragrance embodies that concept. It is the bridge made tangible through scent, an invitation into something larger than the everyday.
The four elements mapped across the pyramid form the structural logic of the fragrance itself. Wind opens with hyssop, black tea, rose thorn, and violet: cool, bitter, sharp. Water, mineral notes and petrichor, grounds the opening in physical sensation, the smell of earth after rain. Earth brings oud, dry leaves, galbanum, leather, and ginseng root: the weight and density of the material world. Fire, arriving through the heart, introduces ash, elemi resin, chili pepper seeds, and saffron: warmth that arrives unexpectedly, disrupting the cool mineral base.
The Evolution
The opening announces itself with mineral clarity: cold, wet stone and petrichor, the smell of air before a storm arrives. Hyssop and black tea bring an herbal bitterness that keeps the opening from feeling clean or simple. Rose thorn adds a green sharpness, a brief vegetal edge that passes quickly. Gradually, the warm materials become more pronounced. The cool mineral base begins to recede as chili and saffron assert themselves. Leather and oud appear in the base, grounding the heart. Incense and ash create a smoky atmosphere. The drydown is where the fragrance becomes itself. Mineral and petrichor persist, but they are now warm rather than cold. Star-dust, the brand calls it that, and the description earns it, settles over the composition. Burnt almond and hot metal persist close to the skin, maintaining a closeness that does not expand outward.
Cultural Impact
Principalities received the Newcomer Award at The Art and Olfaction Awards 2025, a recognition that placed a debut from an unfamiliar Romanian house alongside more established niche perfumers. The fragrance occupies an unusual position: mineral-smoky in character, with a perfumer whose work has drawn attention from collectors seeking unconventional compositions. The Orthodox liturgical reference gives it a cultural identity that sets it apart.
The House
Romania · Est. 2024
Caeleste Parfums is a Romanian niche fragrance house founded in 2024 in Bucharest. The brand draws from the rich traditions of Romanian Orthodox spirituality, translating liturgical imagery into olfactory experiences. Ștefan Răduț serves as creative director, guiding a collection that explores the celestial hierarchy through scent. The initial lineup includes three fragrances named after angelic ranks: Guardian Angel, Principalities, and Archangels. Each fragrance aims to capture aspects of the ethereal world, presented through a visual language of light and transcendence.
If this were a song
Community picks
Principalities sounds like standing in an open field at dusk, watching a storm arrive from the west. Mineral air, distant smoke, the smell of wet earth. Then warmth: the kind that comes from somewhere unexpected. Not music for working, music for being present in something larger than yourself. The quiet after the thunder passes. The weight of incense in a stone room. Cosmic and grounded at once. Sandalwood lingering in the fabric of something worn for years. One listener described it as smelling like a spicy astro-cookie, the warmth underneath the cool surface, the unexpected sweetness in something that starts mineral and sharp. That is the mood: discovery, then comfort, then something you carry home with you.
Intro
M83





























