The Story
Why it exists.
The beginning
Luz Infinita translates to Infinite Light, and Béjar means it as a philosophy, not a metaphor. The Barcelona perfumer draws from his well-documented spiritual pilgrimage, the same journey that shaped his entire approach to fragrance. One encounter along that path stayed with him: the scent of the Al-Kiswa, the black blend covering the Kaaba in Mecca. Something about that combination of sacred space and aromatic memory lodged itself in his creative imagination. He began building toward a fragrance that could hold both darkness and illumination in the same breath, not one chasing the other, but coexisting. The result is a scent conceived as a tribute to the infinite light within each of us, though Béjar has always understood that inner light doesn't arrive clean and simple. It arrives complicated. Neroli opens with the clarity of morning, but cedar and vetiver are already waiting beneath. The name says everything: Luz Infinita. Light, infinite.
What makes this composition distinctive is its refusal to separate the luminous from the grounded. Neroli could have gone full white floral, soft and enveloping. Béjar chose otherwise, pairing that bright citrus blossom with vetiver's earthy smoke and cedar's dry warmth. The effect is a fragrance that opens with apparent innocence, then deepens into something with real character. Cashmeran does the quiet work here: synthetic but seamless, it adds a cashmere-soft warmth that bridges the gap between the crisp top and the woody heart. Geranium keeps the floral element present but never sugary, green, slightly rose-like, and just slightly metallic at the edges.
The evolution
The opening arrives clean and sparkling. Neroli dominates the first five minutes, bright, almost sharp, with petitgrain adding a green-citrus edge that keeps it from going sweet. Vetiver threads through underneath, a subtle smoky counterweight from the start. Cedarwood appears quickly, not dry yet but warming. The transition happens around the ten-minute mark: the neroli doesn't disappear, but it recedes. Sandalwood and patchouli move in, creamy and earthy respectively, while geranium adds a nuanced floral note that feels almost green. Cashmeran smooths the handoff. By the thirty-minute mark, you're in the heart: woody, warm, with a powdery softness from the cashmeran and a slight green lift from geranium. The drydown takes its time. Two hours in, the musk and amber begin to anchor everything. Labdanum appears last, resinous, slightly animalic, grounding the composition without heaviness. On skin, this lasts well beyond average. Eight hours is realistic on most skin types, with sillage that stays close rather than projecting loudly.
Cultural impact
As a 2025 release from an established niche house, Luz Infinita enters a market where woody-musky compositions with spiritual positioning have carved out dedicated followings. Béjar's catalog already includes Deep Amber, Sanctum Perfume, and other concentrated extraits, Luz Infinita extends that tradition with a brighter opening than some, appealing to wearers who want depth without heaviness. The fragrance's above-average performance and unisex positioning align with current demand for versatile scents that transition across occasions and seasons. Early community response notes its uniqueness in the Béjar lineup: fresh but not light, warm but not heavy.



























