The Story
Why it exists.
Created in 2021 by Matsuno Hidenori, Alecto emerged from Kilesa’s Seoul‑born desire to capture a moment of heated contrast. The house, founded in 2015, channels the Korean concept of ‘han’ into scents that feel both rooted and forward‑looking. Hidenori aimed to fuse the bite of black pepper and cinnamon with a bright orange spark, then soften it with a floral heart, delivering a narrative that mirrors the city’s blend of tradition and modern edge.
If this were a song
Community picks
Midnight City
M83
The Beginning
Created in 2021 by Matsuno Hidenori, Alecto emerged from Kilesa’s Seoul‑born desire to capture a moment of heated contrast. The house, founded in 2015, channels the Korean concept of ‘han’ into scents that feel both rooted and forward‑looking. Hidenori aimed to fuse the bite of black pepper and cinnamon with a bright orange spark, then soften it with a floral heart, delivering a narrative that mirrors the city’s blend of tradition and modern edge.
The combination of pepper and cinnamon is unusual for a unisex launch, giving the opening a sharp, almost tactile heat that quickly dissolves into the citrus brightness of orange. By anchoring the heart with aldehydes, jasmine and rose, Hidenori creates a fleeting white‑floral veil that tempers the spice, while the base of black musk, patchouli, cedarwood, amber and oud grounds the composition in a deep, lingering warmth rarely found in indie releases.
The Evolution
The first spray hits like a sudden flare of orange zest, instantly lit by black pepper and cinnamon that crackle on the skin. Within minutes the heat settles, allowing the aldehydic shimmer to lift jasmine and rose into a soft, powdery bloom that feels like sunrise after a night storm. As the heart fades, the base awakens: black musk adds an animalic depth, patchouli brings earthiness, cedarwood and amber lay a smooth, resinous cushion, and oud injects a smoky, lingering finish. By the two‑hour mark the scent has mellowed into a warm, woody veil that clings to clothing, offering a modest 4‑6 hour presence that whispers rather than shouts.
Cultural Impact
Alecto by Kilesa taps into a growing fascination with bold, spicy compositions that echo street‑food markets and traditional spice routes. Its blend of black pepper, cinnamon, and orange resonates with consumers seeking a scent that feels both adventurous and comforting. By marrying familiar culinary notes with modern perfumery techniques, the fragrance has sparked conversations on how everyday flavors can be reinterpreted as personal expression, influencing a wave of new releases that prioritize tactile, memory‑evoking accords. This cultural ripple extends beyond perfume circles, inspiring fashion editors and lifestyle writers to reference its aromatic profile when describing vibrant, energetic atmospheres.
The House
South Korea · Est. 2015
Kilesa positions itself as a small‑scale, artist‑driven perfume house that emerged from Seoul’s burgeoning indie fragrance scene. Since its first launch, the brand has offered a catalogue that reads like a diary of contemporary moods, from the caramel‑kissed warmth of Amande Brûlée (2024) to the bright, citrus‑green spark of Joie de Vivre (2023). Each scent is presented in a restrained bottle that lets the perfume speak for itself, inviting collectors to explore a narrative rather than a brand promise. Kilesa’s releases have found homes in boutique perfumeries across Asia, Europe and North America, where they are praised for their compositional clarity and subtle storytelling.
If this were a song
Community picks
Alecto feels like a neon‑lit alley at dusk: bright, spicy sparks give way to a warm, lingering groove. The primary track captures that transition from electric energy to smooth, woody resonance.
Midnight City
M83
















