The Story
Why it exists.
The beginning
Matcha by O Boticário arrived in 2020, composed by Marilia Zavisas Duarte. The brief was deceptively simple: take a Japanese ritual and run it through a Brazilian lens. Matcha carries centuries of meaning in its origin culture, the focus, the ceremony, the quiet before the day starts. Duarte stripped that down to its olfactory core. Not a candle. Not a latte. The leaf itself, rendered in a fragrance that could sit alongside citrus and herbs without losing its identity.
What makes this structure interesting is the gap between what the pyramid promises and what arrives. Seven top notes suggest chaos, but the opening reads as one thing: citrus. Yuzu, lime, bergamot in quick succession, then the green notes arrive, not to compete but to frame. The heart is where the real intention lives. Matcha tea as a heart note is unusual; most fragrances use green tea as a supporting character. Here it anchors the composition. The powdery, slightly bitter quality of the actual leaf comes through, softened by pear and lily of the valley. Cardamom adds a quiet spice that keeps the whole thing from reading as feminine. The base is generous, musk, sandalwood, vanilla, but it doesn't overwhelm.
The evolution
The opening is all citrus, all brightness. Yuzu and lime hit first, sharp and clean, followed by Calabrian bergamot that sweetens slightly as it spreads. Lemongrass and sage arrive underneath, adding an herbal edge that stops the citrus from reading as furniture polish. This phase lasts about twenty minutes before the hand-off begins. The transition is where most fragrances reveal their intention. Here, the citrus doesn't crash, it recedes slowly, like morning fog lifting off a garden. Green notes pulse underneath, then rise. The matcha announces itself quietly: powdery, slightly bitter, the actual scent of the leaf rather than a stylized interpretation. Pear and lily of the valley provide a soft floral cushion. Lavender extract keeps the green heart aromatic without becoming soapy. Rose sits in the background, adding warmth without sweetness. The drydown takes its time. Three to four hours in, the base begins to settle. Musk and sandalwood form the architecture, clean, warm, close to the skin. Vanilla and tonka bean add a powdery sweetness that doesn't dominate.
Cultural impact
Matcha occupies an interesting position in the O Boticário catalogue: a Japanese cultural reference interpreted through a Brazilian house. The fragrance has found an audience among wearers who want something calmer than the brand's bolder signatures, Malbec, Coffee Woman, without sacrificing character. The green tea heart reads as both contemporary and understated, the kind of fragrance that works in climates where heavy sillage feels out of place.





















