The Story
Why it exists.
The beginning
The Hemingways and Fitzgeralds. A quiet moment curled up with a good book. That's what Commodity had in mind when Book came together, the warmth of literature translated into scent. Perfumer Ketrin Leka built it in three movements: Personal for intimate closeness, Expressive for balanced presence, Bold for amplified declaration. Each version layers the same cedarwood and sandalwood core but shifts the supporting cast. The Expressive version anchors the full composition, warm yet unexpectedly fresh, woody without weight. The Personal rendition infuses black tea and skin musk to heighten the freshness. The Bold finish amplifies with smoky, velvety musks for a signature trail that doesn't apologize.
What makes Book interesting is the tension Ketrin Leka engineered into the structure. Cedarwood brings dry, herbaceous wood. Sandalwood brings creamy warmth. Eucalyptus, not always present in woody fragrances, adds an unexpected green lift that keeps the warmth from becoming heavy. Black tea enters quietly, cool and tannic, settling the composition before the musk takes over. The result is a woody fragrance that works in spring, not just fall. The drydown softens everything into something skin-close and intimate, lasting for hours.
The evolution
The opening hits crisp and green-woody. Eucalyptus and cedar meet sandalwood's creaminess, the unexpected freshness is right there in the first minutes. Black tea arrives quietly, cool and tannic, before the warmth fully settles. The drydown is where Book earns its name. Musk takes over, blending with the woody base into something skin-close and intimate. Sillage drops to moderate. The scent doesn't disappear, it becomes something you have to lean in to find. On fabric, the cedar lingers into the next day. On skin, the drydown holds for hours.
Cultural impact
Book+ arrived during a cultural moment when minimalism in design and architecture became an aesthetic value, not just a trend. Commodity built its identity on a design-forward approach that appealed to creative professionals and those who felt traditional perfumery language failed to capture what they wanted. The brand's unconventional presentation of scent as material rather than luxury positioned it distinctly in niche perfumery. Sandalwood and Virginia cedar woods create a dry, architectural scent with raw materiality and restraint. It fit a niche where consumers sought more intentionality in their choices. The rise of Book+ reflects how niche perfumery shifted toward serving those who wanted fragrance as personal statement rather than crowd-pleaser.




















