The Story
Why it exists.
The beginning
Olive Wood & Leather emerged from Angela Ciampagna's investigation into Mediterranean craftsmanship, olive wood from traditional groves, leather from artisan tanneries. She wanted to capture how these materials age together, how wood darkens with sun while leather softens with wear. The fragrance translates this interplay into scent: warm, resinous woods meeting a leather note that feels both refined and intimate. Released in 2020, it represents a shift toward quieter, more textured compositions, depth over declaration, material over marketing.
What makes this structure interesting is the wood family layering. Gurjum balsam, a dense, resinous tree native to South Asia, brings an almost medicinal depth that cedar and sandalwood then smooth into something wearable. The caramel in the opening isn't dessert-sweet; it's the memory of sugar caramelizing, warm and slightly smoky. Then the base arrives: labdanum lending its balsamic resin, vanilla softening everything into skin-warmth, vetiver adding earthy grit, and oud anchoring the whole thing with its characteristic dark, slightly animalic wood. The result is a pyramid that actually evolves, each layer arriving on its own schedule rather than hitting all at once.
The evolution
The opening arrives in under a minute, lemon bright and immediate, saffron following close behind with its warm, slightly medicinal bite. The caramel smooths the transition, keeping things from turning sharp. Then the handoff: lemon fades, and the wood family takes over. Cedar asserts itself first, dry and pencil-shaving warm, before sandalwood rounds it into something creamier. Gurjum balsam lingers in the background, adding resinous weight without overwhelming. By the mid-drydown, the leather reveals itself, not the harsh leather of industrial spaces, but the soft, worn leather of a beloved jacket. This phase lasts longest on skin, often 3-4 hours, before the base settles into its final form: vanilla and labdanum warm and close, vetiver providing earth, oud whispering its dark presence. On fabric, the drydown extends further, sometimes into the next day.
Cultural impact
In a market that often rewards projection and presence, Olive Wood & Leather takes the opposite position. It's a fragrance for people who've moved past the need to announce themselves. The wearers who love it tend to describe it the same way: elegant, subtle, wearable every day. That quietness is the point, not a limitation, but a choice.



























