Eucharisto Extrait de Parfum

$195.00

Eucharisto is a fragrance born from the heart of Christian worship — a scent shaped by reverence, offering, and the mystery of communion. Its name is not metaphor, but literal: the Holy Eucharist, the thanksgiving at the center of the Christian life. This perfume is not an artistic abstraction of bread and wine, but a gesture of devotion — a meditation in scent on presence, sacrifice, and grace.

It opens with the golden warmth of benzoin and styrax, resinous and luminous like beeswax candles glowing against icon-filled walls. From the very first breath, there is something ancient here — not old, but eternal. A thread of cinnamon bark adds gentle fire, calling to mind incense rising at Vespers, the sweet-spiced smoke curling into stillness.

The heart of the fragrance centers around the bread accord — tender, rounded, profoundly human. It evokes not only the literal smell of freshly baked loaves, but the theological weight they carry: the transformation of the ordinary into the sacred, the material lifted into mystery. This is bread as body, as offering, as life given and received. It is softened by the plush depth of Mysore sandalwood and touched with the deep sweetness of rum, caramel, and almond — not dessert-like, but luminous, like warmth remembered.

Orris butter lends a quiet floral elegance, an echo of the pure vessels and linens that accompany the liturgy. The drydown is subtle and intimate: not a closing, but a lingering — the way incense clings to skin long after the candles have burned low.

This is not a fragrance for adornment. It is a fragrance for remembrance, for stillness, for attending to what is holy. For those who know the Eucharist not as symbol but as reality — the presence of Christ in mystery — Eucharisto offers no replica, but rather an echo: of gold-leaf light, of shared silence, of thanksgiving that begins and ends with love.

Eucharisto is a fragrance born from the heart of Christian worship — a scent shaped by reverence, offering, and the mystery of communion. Its name is not metaphor, but literal: the Holy Eucharist, the thanksgiving at the center of the Christian life. This perfume is not an artistic abstraction of bread and wine, but a gesture of devotion — a meditation in scent on presence, sacrifice, and grace.

It opens with the golden warmth of benzoin and styrax, resinous and luminous like beeswax candles glowing against icon-filled walls. From the very first breath, there is something ancient here — not old, but eternal. A thread of cinnamon bark adds gentle fire, calling to mind incense rising at Vespers, the sweet-spiced smoke curling into stillness.

The heart of the fragrance centers around the bread accord — tender, rounded, profoundly human. It evokes not only the literal smell of freshly baked loaves, but the theological weight they carry: the transformation of the ordinary into the sacred, the material lifted into mystery. This is bread as body, as offering, as life given and received. It is softened by the plush depth of Mysore sandalwood and touched with the deep sweetness of rum, caramel, and almond — not dessert-like, but luminous, like warmth remembered.

Orris butter lends a quiet floral elegance, an echo of the pure vessels and linens that accompany the liturgy. The drydown is subtle and intimate: not a closing, but a lingering — the way incense clings to skin long after the candles have burned low.

This is not a fragrance for adornment. It is a fragrance for remembrance, for stillness, for attending to what is holy. For those who know the Eucharist not as symbol but as reality — the presence of Christ in mystery — Eucharisto offers no replica, but rather an echo: of gold-leaf light, of shared silence, of thanksgiving that begins and ends with love.