The Story
Why it exists.
Leather Couch exists because some smells deserve a room of their own. The brief was simple: take tobacco and cognac, two materials that have shared a glass, a conversation, and a good evening for centuries, and make them wearable. Cristian Calabrò started there, then asked what else a leather chair holds. Lemon and apple to cut the richness. Cypress and neroli to keep it breathing. Sandalwood underneath so it never goes flat.
If this were a song
Community picks
My Funny Valentine
Chet Baker
The Beginning
Leather Couch exists because some smells deserve a room of their own. The brief was simple: take tobacco and cognac, two materials that have shared a glass, a conversation, and a good evening for centuries, and make them wearable. Cristian Calabrò started there, then asked what else a leather chair holds. Lemon and apple to cut the richness. Cypress and neroli to keep it breathing. Sandalwood underneath so it never goes flat.
The oakmoss is doing something interesting here. It's the ingredient that dates the composition slightly, the one that says barbershop, worn armchair, the kind of smell that's been in certain rooms for generations. In a landscape of ultra-clean modern fragrances, that mossy undertone is a quiet act of defiance. It grounds the cognac, makes the tobacco feel lived-in rather than performed.
The Evolution
The opening hits like a barroom: cognac warmth, a flash of citrus, then apple that sweetens just enough to keep it from being heavy. The lemon fades first, around 20 minutes in, it steps aside and lets the tobacco creep forward. The cypress appears somewhere in the middle, adding a quiet greenness that prevents the whole thing from becoming syrupy. By hour two, the violet comes up soft and powdery against the patchouli. The drydown is where Leather Couch earns its name: warm, close, the smell of something that's been sat in rather than displayed. It stays close to skin for hours after the room has forgotten you.
Cultural Impact
Leather Couch occupies an interesting position in the niche-masculine space. It doesn't shout. It doesn't perform. For wearers who want that old-world barbershop atmosphere, leather, tobacco, the smell of a room with history, it delivers without resorting to heavy oud or loud leathers. The cognac opening is the test: if it appeals, the rest will follow.
The House
Italy · Est. 2022
Antonio Maretti is a niche perfume house that emerged from Florence in 2022. The brand translates the city’s artistic heritage into a line of bold, character‑driven scents. Each fragrance is formulated in Italy and released as a limited edition, allowing the house to keep a tight focus on quality and narrative. The portfolio spans unisex and gender‑specific offerings, ranging from the citrus‑bright Limoncello Kiss to the dark, woody Vicious Mind. By anchoring its creations in the cultural memory of the Renaissance, Antonio Maretti invites wearers to experience a modern reinterpretation of classic Italian elegance.
If this were a song
Community picks
Leather Couch sounds like a dimly lit room. Piano under sparse lighting. The kind of jazz that doesn't try to impress you. Low brass. Quiet confidence.
My Funny Valentine
Chet Baker




















