The Story
Why it exists.
Cathleen Cardinali built this fragrance around a specific tension. Cardamom and raspberry open it, sweet and bright, then ylang-ylang blooms into something almost too warm, almost too much, held in check only by amber and cedar at the base. It's a scent that knows what it wants. Named for a year that still means something, this fragrance carries weight without explaining itself. The cardamom at the start is assertive, sharp enough to announce itself clearly before the softer notes arrive. Raspberry moves in next, bringing a tart fruitiness that balances the spice. Ylang-ylang deepens the heart, adding a floral richness that could easily tip into sweetness, but amber and cedar keep it grounded. It's composition with clear intent, built to linger in memory even when it's no longer on skin.
If this were a song
Community picks
Stairway to Heaven
Led Zeppelin
The Beginning
Cathleen Cardinali built this fragrance around a specific tension. Cardamom and raspberry open it, sweet and bright, then ylang-ylang blooms into something almost too warm, almost too much, held in check only by amber and cedar at the base. It's a scent that knows what it wants. Named for a year that still means something, this fragrance carries weight without explaining itself. The cardamom at the start is assertive, sharp enough to announce itself clearly before the softer notes arrive. Raspberry moves in next, bringing a tart fruitiness that balances the spice. Ylang-ylang deepens the heart, adding a floral richness that could easily tip into sweetness, but amber and cedar keep it grounded. It's composition with clear intent, built to linger in memory even when it's no longer on skin.
The pairing of raspberry with ylang-ylang is unusual, fruit and narcotic floral, sweet and heady in equal measure. Whisky, 1969 lets them breathe together, which is the whole point. The bourbon whiskey in the base doesn't smell like a glass. It reads more like the warmth left in a room after people have been drinking and arguing and not sleeping. Cedar and amber hold it together. The cardamom in the opening is sharp enough to cut through, which is why the heart never becomes just sweetness. It's a composition that could easily collapse into something one-dimensional. It doesn't.
The Evolution
It starts clean. Almost sharp, cardamom and pink pepper, nothing subtle about it. Then within minutes, the raspberry arrives and softens everything, even as the nutmeg keeps things grounded underneath. The ylang-ylang takes its time. It doesn't bloom so much as settle, like heat that doesn't need to announce itself. By the time the drydown arrives, the sweetness has integrated into something resinous and warm. The cedar shows up late. The amber stays. The composition shifts considerably over the wearing period, never letting any single element dominate for long. The heart manages to stay complex without ever tipping into confusion. It's a fragrance that earns attention through balance rather than bombast.
Cultural Impact
Whisky, 1969 has found a loyal following among people who want a fragrance with strong sillage and real presence. Something that shifts considerably over the wearing period. It's not a safe choice, which explains why people who connect with it tend to connect deeply. Whisky, 1969 is among the label's more discussed releases. The fragrance makes no attempt to please everyone, and that refusal is part of its appeal. Those who seek it out are looking for something with character and presence, a scent that announces itself without screaming.
The House
USA · Est. 2019
Thin Wild Mercury is a small-batch indie fragrance brand based in Los Angeles. The label creates gender-neutral scents that draw from the cultural histories of Los Angeles and New York, with most fragrances named after specific years that evoke particular moments in American pop culture. Each scent functions as an olfactory artifact, translating eras, moods, and musical moments into wearable perfume. Founder Cathleen Cardinali approaches fragrance creation with a collector's sensibility, treating each bottle as a time capsule anchored to a specific cultural moment rather than a conventional perfume releases.
If this were a song
Community picks
A jazz club at 2am, warm, slightly smoky, unhurried. The saxophone arrives late and doesn't rush. Something about the amber and cedar in the base of Whisky, 1969 sounds like that: a room that's been warm for hours and has no intention of cooling down.
Stairway to Heaven
Led Zeppelin
























