The Story
Why it exists.
Nicolas Beaulieu created Halloween Man in 2012 for the Spanish house founded by fashion designer Jesús del Pozo. The brand's philosophy centers on mystery and self-expression, 'Believe in Your Magic', framing fragrance as personal discovery rather than conformity. This one's tagline says it: 'A man who chooses this scent does not fall under stereotypes, does not follow trends and is not afraid of anything.' The night itself became the brief. Not a costume. A second skin.
If this were a song
Community picks
Strangers
Sigrid
The Beginning
Nicolas Beaulieu created Halloween Man in 2012 for the Spanish house founded by fashion designer Jesús del Pozo. The brand's philosophy centers on mystery and self-expression, 'Believe in Your Magic', framing fragrance as personal discovery rather than conformity. This one's tagline says it: 'A man who chooses this scent does not fall under stereotypes, does not follow trends and is not afraid of anything.' The night itself became the brief. Not a costume. A second skin.
What makes this composition work is the collision it sets up. Apple martini and oriental warmth aren't supposed to occupy the same sentence in a masculine fragrance. But here they do. The martini gives it a bright, almost medicinal clarity, that green-stem note of violet leaf keeping the sweetness from becoming candy. Then the heart leans into contradictions: ginger flower and cinnamon shouldn't smell this warm in a fragrance that also has lavender. They do here. The amber and musk in the base don't resolve anything. They deepen it. That's the bet the perfumer made, and it's a stranger one than it first appears.
The Evolution
The opening announces itself. Citrus, violet leaf, a hint of basil, martini in the best possible sense. But thirty minutes in, the martini accord fades faster than expected. What's left is ginger asserting itself, supported by cinnamon and something slightly floral from the orange blossom. Around the ninety-minute mark, lavender arrives, and stays. That's the surprise. Most fragrances bury lavender. This one lets it sit on top of the spice for a good two hours. The vanilla-tobacco drydown arrives late and stays. On fabric, it can outlast a shower. Moderate sillage throughout means the wearer knows more about this fragrance than anyone in the room. Until they lean in. Then everyone knows.
Cultural Impact
Halloween Man arrived in 2012 as part of a brand with Spanish roots, founded by Jesús del Pozo in 1997. The release marked a calculated expansion beyond the Halloween line's feminine heritage, targeting the growing men's oriental market. At a mid-range price point, it offered accessible luxury in a category traditionally dominated by higher-priced designer houses. The martini note was distinctive for its time, borrowing from contemporary mixology trends that permeated popular culture during the early 2010s. Community reception on perfume forums demonstrated sustained interest, with users praising its ability to balance sweetness with herbal freshness, a combination that positioned it as a bridge fragrance between seasons and occasions.
The House
Spain · Est. 1997
Halloween Perfumes is a Spanish fragrance house that emerged from the creative universe of fashion designer Jesús del Pozo. Since its founding in 1997, the brand has built a devoted following centered on themes of mystery, self-expression, and what they call 'magic.' The label operates under Perfumes y Diseño and has expanded steadily from its initial women's fragrance into a comprehensive collection that includes dedicated offerings for men. The brand positions itself less as a traditional perfume house and more as a community of individuals drawn to its distinctive identity. Their tagline, 'Believe in Your Magic,' encapsulates an ethos that prioritizes personal empowerment and the allure of the unconventional. Fragrances like Halloween Man X, created by perfumer Nicolas Beaulieu, represent the label's ongoing evolution while maintaining the playful, enigmatic spirit that defines the brand.
If this were a song
Community picks
The martini opening hits like a jazz trio, bright, a little sharp, unexpected. Then the warmth of the cinnamon and vanilla comes in like a slow bassline, grounding everything. Moderate tempo. Night energy. Something you'd put on at 9pm when the night still has somewhere to go. The lavender in the heart adds a slightly herbal note, like smoke in a good bar, not a campfire. By the time the leather arrives, you're in a different room than where you started. That arc, from bright to warm to intimate, is the whole story of this fragrance in sound.
Strangers
Sigrid























