Daniela Carrasco
Daniela Carrasco grew up between the Andes and the Pacific, where the scent of rain‑soaked earth shaped her earliest memories. She earned a degree in Social Communication, then turned to aromatherapy, studying the chemistry of native Peruvian herbs. A stint in experiential and sensory design taught her how scent can frame a narrative, so she launched Linen Tutu, a boutique line that translates personal milestones into botanical blends. In 2021 she entered the Artisan Perfumery Mastermind, entering the craft without formal perfume school training but with a relentless curiosity. Within months she released her first public fragrance, earning praise for its honest, tactile character. Today she balances a growing portfolio of scents with a role guiding creator partnerships, proving that intuition and disciplined study can coexist in the world of fine fragrance.
The hits
Notable creations
The signature
How Daniela composes
Carrasco favors natural absolutes and cold‑pressed extracts, often reaching for Peruvian sage, pink pepper, and wild orchid. She layers these with subtle mineral accords to ground the composition. Her technique leans on slow maceration, allowing volatile oils to meld over weeks before bottling. She prefers single‑note focal points that bloom gradually, rather than dense, immediate bursts. This restraint creates fragrances that reveal new facets with each wear, encouraging the wearer to explore the scent over time.
Philosophy
What drives Daniela
Carrasco believes scent should act as a memory keeper, a tactile archive of lived moments. She gathers ingredients that echo a specific feeling—whether the crisp bite of a high‑altitude breeze or the soft glow of sunrise over a kitchen table. Her work starts with a story, then she extracts the emotional core and translates it into aroma. She avoids gimmickry, letting each note earn its place through careful testing. The process feels like a conversation with the material world, and the final perfume serves as a quiet invitation to revisit the original sentiment.
The houses
