The Story
Why it exists.
The beginning
Paradiso emerged from that philosophy, the desire to bottle a feeling rather than a formula. The pool at The Maker Hotel in the Hudson Valley is the true origin point: warm stone, chlorine, tropical florals, and the particular light of a summer afternoon. The fragrance captures that specific quality of contentment, when you stop checking the time and let the day stretch. Blood orange and mangosteen anchor it in that golden, unhurried moment, while cedarwood and oakmoss keep it grounded in the present.
The heart of this composition is the tension between bright citrus and warm florals. Blood orange is aggressive by nature, tart, almost acidic, but here it's tempered by mangosteen's juicy sweetness and the buttery softness of frangipani. Ambrette seed absolute adds a quiet muskiness that bridges the gap between the fruity opening and the earthy base. The result is a fragrance that doesn't choose between energy and warmth. It holds both, which is harder than it sounds.
The evolution
The first hour is dominated by citrus, blood orange and Sicilian bergamot arrive confident and don't wait for permission. This is the fragrance making its first impression, and it commits fully. After 1-2 hours, the tropical florals take over as the citrus recedes. Frangipani adds a lush, almost humid quality while ambrette seed gives the heart a warm, skin-like softness. By the third hour, the base arrives: cedarwood, oakmoss, and patchouli leaf pulling everything closer to the skin. The sillage becomes intimate, present only to those near you. The drydown lasts through the remainder of the wear, staying close and grounded rather than projecting outward.
Cultural impact
Paradiso fits within The Maker's broader project of treating fragrance as a personal environment rather than a social statement. Its moderate sillage reflects a deliberate choice: this is a fragrance for the wearer, not the room. In a market where projection is often treated as a measure of quality, Paradiso quietly asserts a different standard, presence that feels earned rather than demanded.
























