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    Scents of Time

    Scents of Time is an independent fragrance house that has produced several distinct scents across the early 2000s, including Night Star (2001), Ankh (2008), and Pyxis (2008). The brand has released notable fragrances such as Nenufar in 2007 and Maya in 2009, suggesting a consistent creative output during that period. Publicly verifiable information about the brand's origins, founding team, and current operations remains limited. The available product data indicates a focused portfolio of fragrances with names drawing from diverse cultural and celestial references, from Egyptian symbolism to astronomical terms.

    Unknown
    5
    Fragrances
    4.2
    Avg rating
    Shop the collection
    SignatureAnkh
    Ankh
    Community
    4.2
    Average rating
    across 5 fragrances
    Collection
    5
    Fragrances and counting

    Heritage

    A house, in its own words

    Limited publicly verifiable information exists regarding the founding and early history of Scents of Time. The brand first appears in available fragrance databases around the early 2000s, with Night Star listed as a 2001 release. This early entry suggests the house was already established and producing fragrance work at that time, though the specific circumstances of its founding, the identities of its founders, and its country of origin cannot be confirmed through currently available independent sources. The fragrance release timeline shows activity across multiple years including 2008, when both Ankh and Pyxis reportedly entered the market. The name Scents of Time evokes a deliberate engagement with temporality and olfactory memory, though without corroborating documentation, the philosophical intent behind this naming choice remains speculative. The brand appears to have maintained a presence in niche fragrance circles through its various releases, yet detailed historical documentation about its evolution, ownership changes, or strategic development has not emerged in readily accessible public sources. Researchers and fragrance enthusiasts seeking comprehensive documentation of this house's complete history may find that primary source material remains sparse. The Scents of Time fragrance portfolio reveals a naming strategy that draws from mythology, archaeology, and celestial observation. Fragrances like Ankh reference ancient Egyptian symbolism, while Pyxis takes its name from the astronomical constellation once known as the Ship Compass. Night Star suggests a celestial or romantic thematic, and Nenufar appears to reference the Spanish word for water lily, potentially indicating a floral or aquatic orientation. Maya connects to Mesoamerican civilization. These naming choices collectively suggest an aesthetic interested in human heritage, historical artifacts, and natural observation. However, without documented statements from the brand's creators, any interpretation of their guiding philosophy remains inference rather than confirmed fact. The available product information establishes what the brand produced but not the creative principles that informed those decisions. A definitive account of Scents of Time's artistic vision, stated values, or approach to perfumery would require access to interviews, brand documentation, or other primary sources that have not surfaced in public databases.

    2001
    Night Star fragrance released, marking one of the earliest documented Scents of Time products
    2007
    Nenufar added to the fragrance lineup
    2008
    Ankh and Pyxis both released, expanding the portfolio with Egyptian and astronomical references
    2009
    Maya fragrance made available, drawing from Mesoamerican cultural imagery

    Did you know?

    Interesting facts

    01

    The name Ankh corresponds directly to the Egyptian hieroglyphic symbol representing eternal life, suggesting the fragrance may have been conceived with funerary or immortality themes drawn from ancient Egyptian perfumery traditions.

    02

    Pyxis takes its name from an astronomical term referring to the Ship Compass constellation, a relatively uncommon naming choice in perfumery that positions this fragrance within celestial navigation mythology.

    03

    The brand's activity period from 2001 to 2009 shows a pattern of releasing multiple fragrances in concentrated timeframes, with 2008 producing at least two distinct scents.

    04

    The word Nenufar is Spanish for water lily, suggesting the fragrance may feature aquatic or floral notes derived from aquatic botanical sources.