The Story
Why it exists.
oM began as a private commission for Marlen Harrison, the voice behind The Perfume Critic. Christi Meshell set out to bottle the memory of Harrison’s summer wandering through southern Spain’s white‑washed towns, where orange trees line sun‑baked plazas and incense‑laden markets linger in the air. Launched in 2012, the fragrance translates that Mediterranean heat into a single‑batch vignette that sits alongside House of Matriarch’s forest‑inspired catalogue.
If this were a song
Community picks
Mediterranean Sundance
Al Di Meola & Paco de Lucía
The Beginning
oM began as a private commission for Marlen Harrison, the voice behind The Perfume Critic. Christi Meshell set out to bottle the memory of Harrison’s summer wandering through southern Spain’s white‑washed towns, where orange trees line sun‑baked plazas and incense‑laden markets linger in the air. Launched in 2012, the fragrance translates that Mediterranean heat into a single‑batch vignette that sits alongside House of Matriarch’s forest‑inspired catalogue.
The pairing of orange blossom with incense is a deliberate clash of light and shadow. The white floral heart offers a crisp, citrus‑sweet lift that recalls blooming orchards, while the base of incense drifts in like a prayer‑smoke from a distant chapel. This juxtaposition mirrors the brand’s love for contrast, pure Pacific Northwest botanicals meeting a hint of Mediterranean mystique, creating a scent that feels both airy and grounded.
The Evolution
The first ten minutes feel like a breezy promenade through an orange grove at dawn; a faint citrus edge whispers, though the notes list only orange blossom, the accord hints at that brightness. As the sun climbs, the heart blooms fully, orange blossom unfurls, sweet‑soapy and white‑floral, wrapping the wearer in a gentle, almost edible glow. Around the half‑hour mark the incense begins to assert itself, a warm, smoky veil that carries a subtle balsamic amber undertone. By the one‑hour point the incense dominates, leaving a lingering ember of amber‑kissed smoke that clings to skin for the remainder of its four‑to‑six hour life. The drydown is quiet, a soft, soapy finish that fades like the last light over a Mediterranean courtyard.
Cultural Impact
Since its 2012 debut, oM has become a quiet favorite among collectors who appreciate its dual homage to Mediterranean sunlight and incense‑laden rituals, often cited in niche forums as the go‑to scent for summer evenings in stone towns. Its influence extends to regional boutique retailers, who often feature oM in curated seasonal displays, reinforcing its status as a cultural touchstone of Mediterranean‑inspired perfumery.
The House
USA · Est. 2009
House of Matriarch crafts natural high‑perfume from Seattle, Washington. Artisan perfumer Christi Meshell designs each scent as a small‑batch vignette that draws on the mist‑laden forests of the Pacific Northwest. The line serves both women and men, offering compositions that balance botanical purity with a narrative edge. Since its 2009 launch, the house has built a niche of collectors who value rarity and story‑driven fragrance.
If this were a song
Community picks
Imagine a late‑afternoon stroll through a sun‑warmed plaza, orange petals fluttering as distant incense drifts from a stone chapel, soft, warm, and subtly rhythmic.
Mediterranean Sundance
Al Di Meola & Paco de Lucía























