The Story
Why it exists.
Carlisle arrived in 2013 as part of Parfums de Marly's ongoing conversation with French aristocratic history. The house draws inspiration from the court of Louis XV, the pleasure palace at Marly, and the thoroughbred horses that embodied power without announcement. Carlisle was conceived as a masculine fragrance that could hold its own in that lineage, a bold presence that understood the art of understated elegance. The composition opens with crisp green apple and warm nutmeg, creating an unexpected sharpness that hints at the depth yet to come. As the fragrance develops, it reveals layers of complexity that speak to its royal heritage, balancing crispness with warmth in a way that feels both intentional and effortless.
If this were a song
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The Less I Know The Better
Tame Impala
The Beginning
Carlisle arrived in 2013 as part of Parfums de Marly's ongoing conversation with French aristocratic history. The house draws inspiration from the court of Louis XV, the pleasure palace at Marly, and the thoroughbred horses that embodied power without announcement. Carlisle was conceived as a masculine fragrance that could hold its own in that lineage, a bold presence that understood the art of understated elegance. The composition opens with crisp green apple and warm nutmeg, creating an unexpected sharpness that hints at the depth yet to come. As the fragrance develops, it reveals layers of complexity that speak to its royal heritage, balancing crispness with warmth in a way that feels both intentional and effortless.
What makes Carlisle unusual is its use of green apple not as a frivolous top-note moment but as a genuine structural element. That bitter, almost tart quality creates a counterweight to the warmth that follows. Saffron doesn't just add spice, it adds a slightly medicinal sharpness that keeps the opening honest. The tonka bean and davana in the heart shift the fragrance into territory that could feel familiar, even classical, if it weren't for the way the marine notes and moss hold everything at a slight remove. It's not trying to be modern. It's trying to be clear.
The Evolution
The opening lasts longer than expected, that green apple and nutmeg combination holds for twenty minutes before the saffron introduces itself and the heart begins to open. What arrives is a wave of warmth that feels almost sudden after the crispness that preceded it. Rose and tonka bean blend into something soft and recognizable, but the marine notes keep it from settling into anything too comfortable. Three hours in, the sandalwood reveals itself fully, warm, slightly creamy, with vanilla that doesn't announce itself but absolutely takes over. The patchouli underneath adds an earthy depth that prevents the drydown from becoming merely sweet. On clothing, Carlisle lasts into the evening. The next morning, there's a ghost of vanilla and wood that smells better than the fragrance itself did.
Cultural Impact
Carlisle occupies an interesting position in the Parfums de Marly catalog, offering a warmer character that stands apart from the house's more assertive offerings. It appeals to those who want something that smells expensive without feeling obvious. The green apple and nutmeg combination brings a distinctive edge that keeps the fragrance from feeling like a straightforward period piece, while the sandalwood-vanilla drydown aligns it with the house's signature warmth. The opening arrives crisp and sharp, commanding attention before settling into something softer and more intimate.
The House
France · Est. 2009
Parfums de Marly resurrects the opulent spirit of 18th-century French royalty for the modern world. The house is famous for its bold, powerful fragrances that blend classical elegance with contemporary flair, all inspired by the lavish lifestyle and passion for perfume at the court of King Louis XV.
If this were a song
Community picks
Carlisle sounds like a late afternoon in late fall, the warmth is there, but so is a certain sharpness in the air. The green apple opening has the energy of early light, the kind that cuts through fog. The drydown settles into something that sounds like a fire being built in a room that's been empty all day, quiet, deliberate, warming. The tracklist moves from that crisp opening energy into something more settled, ending somewhere that feels like the end of a day when you've done what you set out to do.
The Less I Know The Better
Tame Impala































