The Story
Why it exists.
Encelade takes its name from Enceladus, a moon orbiting Saturn. It's one of the most active bodies in the solar system, geysers erupt through its icy crust, and beneath that frozen surface lies an ocean. It's a place of contradictions: cold on the outside, violent underneath. That duality runs through the fragrance itself, where an initial wave of bright, almost startling tartness opens the composition before revealing something darker, smokier underneath. The interplay between crisp clarity and deeper warmth gives the scent a living quality, as if it cannot decide between restraint and intensity. As it settles on skin, the fragrance shifts and breathes, the early sharpness mellowing into something richer while maintaining its edge.
If this were a song
Community picks
Eureka
Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross
The Beginning
Encelade takes its name from Enceladus, a moon orbiting Saturn. It's one of the most active bodies in the solar system, geysers erupt through its icy crust, and beneath that frozen surface lies an ocean. It's a place of contradictions: cold on the outside, violent underneath. That duality runs through the fragrance itself, where an initial wave of bright, almost startling tartness opens the composition before revealing something darker, smokier underneath. The interplay between crisp clarity and deeper warmth gives the scent a living quality, as if it cannot decide between restraint and intensity. As it settles on skin, the fragrance shifts and breathes, the early sharpness mellowing into something richer while maintaining its edge.
Rhubarb is an unusual top note. It's not a citrus, not a floral, it's almost medicinal in its tartness, a green sharpness that doesn't invite. In the right context, though, it becomes electric. Here, it arrives first and doesn't apologize for itself. The cedar that follows is dry and woody, more mineral than sweet, providing the structural backbone that lets the leather below breathe. That leather isn't a soft, worn-in note, it's smoky, almost raw, and it anchors everything that comes before it. Vetiver and sandalwood then fill the base with warmth, but the tonka bean keeps it from becoming heavy.
The Evolution
The first spray hits immediately. Rhubarb, sharp and sour, like biting into a stalk still wet with morning dew. It doesn't ease in, it arrives like an announcement. Ten minutes in, and the cedar has taken over the conversation, dry and aromatic, pushing the rhubarb into the background without killing it. The tartness stays alive as a sour thread beneath the wood. By the third hour, the leather has emerged fully. It's smoky and almost austere, not the comfortable leather of old jackets but something more elemental. Vetiver brings its earthy, slightly medicinal quality alongside it. The rhubarb hasn't disappeared, it's still there, quietly sour, the tell that this composition has a memory of something fresh underneath all that warmth. The drydown is where it settles. Sandalwood and leather become almost a single note, with tonka bean softening the edges just enough to keep it from feeling harsh. This is where it lives for the next several hours, warm, woody, powdery at the edges. On fabric, it lasts into the next day.
Cultural Impact
The reception has been sharply divided, which is itself a form of impact. Those who connect with Encelade tend to do so deeply, the fragrance becomes a signature rather than a rotation piece. The unusual trajectory from bright opening through darker heart creates an arc that generates strong opinions. The exceptional longevity means it leaves an impression that outlasts the initial encounter. Among its peer group of woody-aromatic fragrances, it occupies a specific space: not safe, not aggressive. The fragrance develops differently across skin, with the tart opening eventually yielding to richer depths as the scent settles and evolves.
The House
France · Est. 2009
Marc-Antoine Barrois translates the timeless elegance of his Parisian haute couture into an equally refined line of fragrances. These are not mere accessories but standalone works of art, born from a deep creative partnership with perfumer Quentin Bisch. The house is celebrated for its unique, genderless scents that feel both classic and completely of the moment.
If this were a song
Community picks
The fragrance moves like something tectonic, rhubarb as a sudden eruption, leather as what settles after. Music that carries that same tension: sharp edges that resolve into something warm and inevitable. The sonic equivalent is music that begins cold and becomes warm, or music that holds two opposing moods in the same track.
Eureka
Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross



























