The Story
Why it exists.
The beginning
Hamid Merati-Kashani and Mona Kattan set out to build something addictive, a blend where sandalwood and musk don't compete but amplify each other. The brief was simple: velvety, sensual, and empowering. The concept of freedom became the framework, freedom as in choosing exactly who you want to smell like, without apology. No gender rules, no occasion limits. Just the scent of someone who decided their own rules. Freedom Musk Santal | 34 arrived in 2025 as part of the house's ongoing exploration of what personal expression through fragrance actually means. Each fragrance name carries a number representing the formula iterations before final approval, and the sandalwood called from somewhere warm and certain, its creamy depth anchoring the composition.
What makes this composition work is the restraint at its center. Freesia, lily, and lavender don't compete with each other, they layer into a quiet white floral cloud that sits between the bright opening and the warm base. The pink pepper adds just enough to keep things interesting without becoming the story. The real craft is in the transition. That luminous citrus opening doesn't vanish, it fades, softly, into the florals, which then hand off to sandalwood and amber. Each phase feels intentional. No jarring cuts. No sudden drops. The fragrance moves like someone walking into a room they've been invited to, not someone announcing themselves at the door.
The evolution
The opening hits fast. Bergamot and mandarin arrive together, bright and sparkling, with pink pepper lending a subtle warmth that keeps the citrus from reading as sharp. Freesia appears first, soft, slightly sweet, almost green. Then lily joins, adding body. Lavender keeps things from getting too delicate. The drydown belongs to sandalwood and amber. Creamy, warm, slightly sweet. Musk keeps everything close to the skin, this isn't a fragrance that fills a room, but it doesn't need to. It stays present on the wearer long after others would have faded. Vetiver adds a quiet base note that keeps the warmth grounded. The white florals drift through the composition, their sweetness threading between the wood and musk like a whispered aside. What emerges is a scent that feels intimate rather than announced, confident in its quiet presence, never demanding attention but impossible to ignore.
Cultural impact
Freedom Musk Santal | 34 fits into the broader conversation around fragrance as self-expression, a scent designed to feel personal rather than prescribed. This release extends the house's philosophy into a composition that works across genders, occasions, and moods. The scent itself invites the wearer to decide exactly who they want to smell like, without apology. Wearers describe it as the scent of someone comfortable enough to not need the room's attention, someone who chose their own rules and stopped apologizing for them. It's a fragrance that speaks quietly but sticks around, the kind of presence that feels entirely your own.






















