Marina Celis Muñoz
Marina Celis Muñoz represents a new generation of perfumers building their craft with intention and curiosity. She began her fragrance career in evaluation, developing a sharp critical eye for how materials behave and interact before transitioning into the creative side of perfumery. Now working as a Perfumer, she approaches each composition with the methodical precision of someone who trained in analysis but dreams in accord. Her stated ambition to create something distinctive suggests a perfumer who resists the familiar path. She operates within an industry increasingly shaped by North and South American raw materials, a reality that likely informs her material choices. The early years of her career show someone who understands that mastery takes time, one evaluation and one formula at a time.
The hits
Notable creations
The signature
How Marina composes
Marina's style remains in formation, which makes it more interesting. Her evaluator background gives her a methodical approach to material selection; she tests assumptions before committing to accords. Her years in the industry have shown her the value of understanding raw materials from their source through their application. She gravitates toward compositions that reveal something unexpected rather than defaulting to familiar combinations. Without a documented library of signature fragrances yet, her style is perhaps best described as analytical creativity: the instinct of an artist tempered by the discipline of a evaluator. The trajectory points toward a distinctive voice rather than a house aesthetic.
Philosophy
What drives Marina
Marina believes in earning her place in the industry through genuine skill rather than inherited reputation. Her work prioritizes originality and intentionality over trend-following. She approaches perfumery as both an art form requiring creative courage and a technical discipline demanding rigor and patience. The evaluator background shapes her philosophy: she values understanding why something works before pursuing what feels new. Her goal of offering something distinctive reflects a belief that the market has room for voices willing to take creative risks and build their own vocabulary of scent.
The houses
