Yule 2025

No winter lasts forever; no spring skips its turn. Hal Borland’s reassurance feels especially poignant now, in a year that has asked so much of us. It has been a challenging season in countless ways: globally, locally, intimately. The darkness has felt long, the chill of countless terrors freezing the breath in our lungs and the beat of our hearts. And yet, threaded through every difficult moment is a truth that refuses to dim: we are not meant to walk through any of this alone.

Community is not a luxury in times like these; it is a lifeline. It is the network of hands that lift us up when we falter, it is the shelter against the storm. In dark times, community becomes the architecture of hope, built from small acts of care: a meal cooked, a message sent, a burden shared.

Love, too, becomes a form of courage during periods of extreme upheaval. It is the choice to remain open-hearted despite the horrors. Compassion is love’s companion; supporting those who are vulnerable, asking for help when we need it, offering comfort without being asked… this is what will keep the cold from taking root inside us.

No winter lasts forever. And when the thaw comes – when sunlight returns to the edges of our days – it will be because we kept one another warm. With the strength we find in each other, with the communities we build and nurture, we will see spring again together soon.

Hold onto each other. We’re all we have.

  • Creepo Yuletide Greetings 2025

    Creepo Yuletide Greetings 2025

  • Edward Gorey House Yule 2025

    Edward Gorey House Yule 2025

  • Every (Holi)day is Halloween

    Every (Holi)day is Halloween

  • Girth of Venus

    Girth of Venus

  • Grove of Pomegranates 2025

    Grove of Pomegranates 2025

  • Kaffeeklatsch 2025

    Kaffeeklatsch 2025

  • Mall Goth Family Album

    Mall Goth Family Album

  • Santa Doesn't Need Your Help 2025

    Santa Doesn't Need Your Help 2025

  • The Erl-King

    The Erl-King

  • The Hundred-Acre Wood

    The Hundred-Acre Wood

  • The Lavender Kitchen

    The Lavender Kitchen

  • 2am Diner Coffee

    2AM Diner Coffee Perfume Oil

    The scent of a too-big mug of coffee at your favorite all-night diner after the clubs let out: a slow ribbon of clove smoke, the warm fry-oil haze that clings to everything, and a fleeting gust of maple syrup drifting through the booths.

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  • A Date With Krampus

    A Date With Krampus Perfume Oil

    This one’s a holiday scent for all the Archive of Our Own regulars, proud teratophiliacs, and slashfic aficionados: those brave, unblushing souls who know exactly what tags they’re filtering for and aren’t afraid of a little (or a lot of) morally-ambiguous monster romance. A filthy-sweet gourmand gone feral: scorched caramel and dark cocoa nibs tangled with warm, skin-slick musk, a crack of black leather, a swirl of brandy, and the faint metallic scrape of chains dragged across a bedroom floor.

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  • Amber Incense And Honey Cakes

    Amber Incense and Honeycakes Perfume Oil

    An offering made in the depths of the year’s darkness to honor the Solstice sun.

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  • aurum

    Aurum Beard Oil

    The worst crime against man’s life was committed by the person who first put gold on his fingers, though it is not recorded who did this, for I deem the whole story of Prometheus mythical, although antiquity assigned to him also an iron ring, and intended this to be understood as a fetter, not an ornament. 

    – Pliny the Elder

    Molten amber, gilded tobacco flower, and Mysore sandalwood.

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  • Bananas Foster Hair Gloss

    Caramel-soaked banana slices sizzling in butter and brown sugar, flamed with dark rum, and poured over warm vanilla ice cream.

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  • Barraquito

    Barraquito Perfume Oil

    Espresso poured over lush condensed milk and a bright thread of lemon, sweetened with Licor 43 and finished with a dusting of warm cinnamon.

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  • The Bear Prince

    Bear Prince Perfume Oil

    Shaggy fur, snow-flecked and rose-touched.

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  • Black Coffee And Apple Pie

    Black Coffee and Apple Pie Perfume Oil

    The inky bite of black coffee rising in gusts of steam, softened by the warm-gold glow of buttered crust and sugared apples.

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  • black julbocken alchemy lab

    Black Julbocken Alchemy Lab Perfume Oil

    Our winter mascot! A musky, snow-touched, forest-deep Yuletide blend: shaggy black wool and a slushy tangle of juniper, mistletoe, winter sage, spikenard, white moss, and terebinth.

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  • Blackberry Cream Cheese Sufganiyot

    Blackberry Cream Cheese Sufganiyot Perfume Oil

    Tangy cream cheese folded through warm bakery dough, still puffed from the fryer, and thick, dark wild blackberry jam.

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  • bread pudding

    Bread Pudding for an Unfortunate Widow Perfume Oil

    A whiff of seasonal dread, candied and cursed; the perfect gourmand perfume for holiday melancholics. A dense, boozy thud of brandied plum, candied citrus peel, dried cherries, sherry, blackened clove and nutmeg, ambered dust, moth-eaten burgundy velvet curtains, and a tiny plume of smoke from recently-spent matchsticks.

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  • Brown Sugar Vanilla Latte

    Brown Sugar Vanilla Latte Perfume Oil

    After thirty years of reluctantly drinking coffee, Ted has become a bean aficionado thanks to a local shop called the Head Nut. Recently, we bought French vanilla and bourbon chocolate beans from them and ever since that day, Ted has been hooked. Of course, Ted’s morning coffee is the breakfast beverage equivalent to a cozy hug: a slow-simmered swirl of brown sugar melting into steamed milk, wrapped around the soothing, sweet warmth of vanilla-infused espresso. 

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  • Bulgarian Rose And Coffee Beans

    Bulgarian Rose and Coffee Beans Perfume Oil

    Voluptuous Bulgarian rose unfurls like crimson silk, met by the dark, resinous warmth of freshly cracked coffee beans.

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  • But Men Loved Darkness Rather Than Light

    But Men Loved Darkness Rather Than Light 2025 Perfume Oil

    The world’s light shines, shine as it will,

    The world will love its darkness still.

    I doubt though when the world’s in hell,

    It will not love its darkness half so well.

     

    The world will love its darkness: cistus labdanum, ginger, East Indian patchouli, pimento berry, oakmoss, saffron, smoky vanilla, sage, myrrh, and bitter clove.

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  • Butter Rum Cookie Atmosphere Spray

    Rum-soaked butter cookies, crusted with sugar, soaked in almond and garnished with orange rind.

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  • Buttered Beere Hair Gloss

    Take three pintes of Beere, put fiue yolkes of Egges to it, straine them together, and set it in a pewter pot to the fyre, and put to it halfe a pound of Sugar, one penniworth of Nutmegs beaten, one penniworth of Cloues beaten, and a halfepenniworth of Ginger beaten, and when it is all in, take another pewter pot and brewe them together, and set it to the fire againe, and when it is readie to boyle, take it from the fire, and put a dish of sweet butter into it, and brewe them together out of one pot into an other.
    – The Good Huswifes Handmaide for the Kitchin, 1594

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  • Cafe Con Miel

    Cafe con Miel Perfume Oil

    Soothing, warm and quietly radiant: espresso kissed with honey, swirled into warm steamed milk, and crowned with a dusting of cinnamon.

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  • Chanukkiyah

    Chanukkiyah 2025 Perfume Oil

    Baruch ata Ado-nai, Elo-heinu Melech ha’olam, Asher kid’shanu b’mitzvosav v’tzivanu l’hadlik ner shel Chanukah.

     

    Baruch ata Ado-nai, Elo-heinu Melech ha’olam, She’asah nisim la’avoseinu, bayamim ha’hem baz’man hazeh.

     

    Baruch ata Ado-nai, Elo-heinu Melech ha’olam, She’hecheyanu, vekiyemanu vehigi’anu laz’man hazeh.

     

    Olive oil, olive blossom, beeswax, glowing amber, sweet sufganiyot, pomegranate, and fig.

     

    Ha’Neiros halalu anachnu madlikin al hanisim ve’al hanifla’os, ve’al hat’shu’os ve’al hamilchamos, sh’asisa la’avoseinu bayamim hahem baz’man hazeh, al yedei kohaneicha hakedoshim. Vechol sh’monas yemei Chanukah, haneiros halalu kodesh hem. Ve’ein lanu reshus le’hishtamesh ba’hem, eh’la lir’osam bilvad, ke’dei le’hodos u’lehalel leshimcha hagadol al nisecha ve’al nifle’osecha ve’al yeshu’oshecha.

     

    Ma’oz tzur yeshu’asi

    Lecha na’eh leshabe’ach

    Tikone bais tefilasi

    Ve’sham todah nezabe’ach

    Le’es Tachin Mabe’ach

    Mitzar ham’nabe’ach

    Az egmor beshir mizmor

    Chanukas hamizbe’ach.

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  • Chicory Coffee And Beignet

    Chicory Coffee and Biegnets Perfume Oil

    The perfume of French Quarter mornings: rich chicory coffee, earthy and bittersweet, drifting through the powdered-sugar clouds of warm beignets dusted to luminosity.

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  • Christmas Lustre Perfume Oil

    May Christmas shed lustre around you.

    Amber-illuminated roasted chestnut, cardamom, caramel, and allspice.

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  • Christmasween

    Christmasween Perfume Oil

    The scent of ghost stories told beside a crackling fireplace, with garlands of evergreen hanging beside October’s carved pumpkins. Hearthlight and jack o’lanterns cast shadows on cobwebbed corners. Candied orange peel, mulled cider, smoked myrrh twirling through a cranberry garland, balsam resin and amber-drizzled pumpkin, smoldering hearthwood, and the soft honeyed glow of dripping beeswax.

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  • Coffee Beans Caramel And Golden Amber

    Coffee Beans, Caramel, and Golden Amber Perfume Oil

    Freshly roasted coffee beans releasing their dark, velvety warmth amongst ribbons of molten caramel and a haze of deliciously radiant golden amber.

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  • Coffee Ice Cream Float

    Coffee Ice Cream Float Perfume Oil

    My Lolo used to make these every Sunday. A swirl of nostalgia: cold, creamy coffee ice cream melting into a fizz of root beer, turning effervescent bubbles into caramelized satin.

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  • Dismembered Noggin Bouquet Perfume Oil

    Not exactly my definition of a happy Christmas, but to each their own. Wild pansies, white honey, and frothy cream.

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  • Diwali

    Diwali Perfume Oil

    The Festival of Lights, a celebration of life, prosperity, and the triumph of good over evil, light over darkness, and knowledge over ignorance. The first day, Dhanvantari Triodasi, honors Lakshmi, the Goddess of Wealth, Good Fortune, and Splendor, and Yama, Lord of Death and the Keeper of the Book of Destiny. The second day, Narak-Chaturdashi, celebrates Lord Krishna’s victory over the demon lord, Narkasur. On this day, fierce Kali, the Great and Terrible Mother, is venerated, and she is entreated to grant her children strength. Narak-Chaturdashi also commemorates the birth of Hanuman, the vanara who helped Lord Rama rescue Sita from Ravana, the Rakshasa king. The third day, called Diwali, is wholly devoted to the worship and propitiation of Lakshmi, She Who is as Beautiful as a Lotus. The fourth day, Annakut, is the first day of the lunar New Year. Old accounts are settled, new ventures begin. On the fifth and final day of Diwali, Bhayiduj, sibling love is celebrated.

     

    It is a time to banish ignorance and hate, and to dissolve jealousy. It is a time to renew our spirits through light and understanding, and to ask for blessings of prosperity and joy for the upcoming year.

     

    It is a time where we embrace our friends and forgive our enemies.

    Lotus root, mogra, mango, tamarind, cardamom, clove, almond milk, cashew, rice flower, coconut, supari, raisins, and incense crafted from aloeswood, red sandalwood, cedar, and spikenard.

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  • Dulce De Leche Sufganiyot

    Dulce de Leche Sufganiyot Perfume Oil

    A molten heart of slow-cooked milk caramel swirled with vanilla bean and a faint whisper of toasted coconut.

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  • Dumb Cake

    Dumb Cake 2025 Perfume Oil

    This is the scent of an awkward encounter with a Yule-evoked doppelgänger mate: spectral cologne, blurry herbs, fireplace ash, and a dusting of crumbs.

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  • edward bear

    Edward Bear Perfume Oil

    Here is Edward Bear, coming downstairs now, bump, bump, bump, on the back of his head, behind Christopher Robin. It is, as far as he knows, the only way of coming downstairs, but sometimes he feels that there really is another way, if only he could stop bumping for a moment and think of it. And then he feels that perhaps there isn’t. Anyhow, here he is at the bottom, and ready to be introduced to you. Winnie-the-Pooh.

     

    When I first heard his name, I said, just as you are going to say, “But I thought he was a boy?”

     

    “So did I,” said Christopher Robin.

     

    “Then you can’t call him Winnie?”

     

    “I don’t.”

     

    “But you said——”

     

    “He’s Winnie-ther-Pooh. Don’t you know what ‘ther’ means?”

     

    “Ah, yes, now I do,” I said quickly; and I hope you do too, because it is all the explanation you are going to get.

     

    Honey-slathered buttered toast, glittering amber beams of sunlight, warm milk, cotton stuffing, and cuddly roasted vanilla.

     

     

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  • Eel King

    Eel King Perfume Oil

    An ode to persistent typos and overconfident, profoundly incorrect autocorrect. Dedicated to Ali in gratitude for years upon years of undangling my participles.

     

    Proceeds from the sale of this scent benefit Philadelphia’s Childrens Literacy Initiative who helps provide Black and Latino children with high-quality and culturally sustaining literary education.


    7-year aged patchouli, candied dates, and dried red currant.

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  • Eviscerated with a No. 7 Crochet Hook

    Eviscerated with a No. 7 Crochet Hook Perfume Oil

    A bloodless scent stitched together like delicate antique lace, with a hint of powdered violet, plum brandy, and gleaming aldehydes.

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  • Faithfully Yours, Charles Dickens

    Faithfully Yours, Charles Dickens Perfume Oil

    48, Rue de Courcelles.

    Eighteenth January 1847

     

    My Dear Mrs. F.

     

    I send you, on the other side, the tremendous document which will make you for ninety years (I hope) a beautiful Punchmaker in more senses as one. 

     

    I shall be delighted to dine with you on Thursday. Mr Foster says amen. Commend me to your Lord, and believe me (with respectful compliments to Lord Chesterfield) always Mrs. F.                                            

    Faithfully yours, Charles Dickens.

     

    To make three pints of Punch

     

    Peel into a very strong common basin (which may be broken, in case of accident, without damage to the owner’s peace or pocket) the rinds of three lemons, cut very thin, and with as little as possible of the white coating between the peel and the fruit, attached. Add a double-handfull of lump sugar (good measure), a pint of good old rum, and a large wine-glass full of brandy – if it not be a large claret glass, say two. Set this on fire, by filling a warm silver spoon with the spirit, lighting the contents at a wax taper, and pouring them gently in. Let it burn three or four minutes at least, stirring it from time to time. Then extinguish it by covering the flame. Then squeeze in the juice of the three lemons, and add a quart of boiling water. Stir the whole well, cover it up for five minutes, and stir again. 

     

    At this crisis (having skimmed off the lemon pips with a spoon) you may taste. If not sweet enough, add sugar to your liking, but observe that it will be a little sweeter presently. Pour the whole into a jug, tie a leather or coarse cloth over the top, so as to exclude the air completely, and stand it in a hot oven ten minutes, or on a hot stove one quarter of an hour. Keep it until it comes to table in a warm place near the fire, but not too hot. If it be intended to stand three or four hours, take half the lemon-peel out, or it will acquire a bitter taste. 

     

    The same punch allowed to cool by degrees, and then iced, is delicious. It requires less sugar when made for this purpose. If you wish to produce it bright, strain it into bottles through silk. 

     

    These proportions and directions will, of course, apply to any quantity.

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  • Festive Rat Crackers Perfume Oil

    A handful of dates and black figs plopped into a frosted glass frothing with cranberry champagne.

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  • First Noel, First Base Perfume Oil

    Hot, sultry beeswax and blushing pink apple.

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  • Frankincense Smoke Hair Gloss

    A frost-edged nave of stone, where stained glass glimmers with the light from prayer-lofted votives. Spirals of incense drift through the chill winter air, mingling with the solemn drip of beeswax from altar candles. Cedar pews gleam under centuries of prayer, and the air hums with  hushed devotion.

    Artwork by Carl Holsøe, 1890

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  • Gingerbread And Leather

    Gingerbread & Leather Perfume Oil

    Ho ho ho: black leather, gingerbread, clove, and tobacco.

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  • Gingerbread Glory Hole

    Gingerbread Glory Hole Perfume Oil

    An aromatic panel of  gingerbread conveniently drilled at hip-height, smutted up with patchouli and boozy brown musk.

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  • Gingerbread Sin

    Gingerbread Sin Perfume Oil

    Gingerbread with amber, sandalwood, black patchouli and cinnamon.

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  • Gingerbread Snek

    Gingerbread Snek 2025 Perfume Oil

    Gingerbread thickened with molasses and patchouli, spiced with Snake oil, and frosted with sugared vanilla bean.

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  • gloomily gloomily

    Gloomily, Gloomily Perfume Oil

    “Good morning, Eeyore,” said Pooh.

     

    “Good morning, Pooh Bear,” said Eeyore gloomily. “If it is a good morning,” he said. “Which I doubt,” said he.

     

    “Why, what’s the matter?”

     

    “Nothing, Pooh Bear, nothing. We can’t all, and some of us don’t. That’s all there is to it.”

     

    “Can’t all what?” said Pooh, rubbing his nose.

     

    “Gaiety. Song-and-dance. Here we go round the mulberry bush.”

     

    “Oh!” said Pooh. He thought for a long time, and then asked, “What mulberry bush is that?”

     

    “Bon-hommy,” went on Eeyore gloomily. “French word meaning bonhommy,” he explained. “I’m not complaining, but There It Is.”

     

    Every solid friend group has at least one goth kid representing. Soft grey musk, pink thistle, lavender ash, tea leaves, pale iris, grey lilac, and rain-soaked moss.

     

    Each purchase of Gloomily, Gloomily comes with a 1/32 oz imp of the Donkey’s Tail. The Donkey’s Tail is not available for sale on its own, and make sure you keep it safe as you never know where it might end up.

    THE DONKEY’S TAIL
    “That Accounts for a Good Deal,” said Eeyore gloomily. “It Explains Everything. No Wonder.”

    Doubles as a bell-pull: a beribboned strip of French lavender, bourbon vanilla, silver thistle, grey musk, pink silk, and well-loved grey cotton.

     

     

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  • Greensleeves

    Greensleeves Perfume Oil

    Alas my love you do me wrong

    To cast me off discourteously

    For i have loved you so long

    Delighting in your company.

    Greensleeves was all my joy,

    Greensleeves was my delight.

    Greensleeves was my heart of gold

    And who but my lady Greensleeves?

    Alas my love that you should own

    A heart of wanton vanity

    So i must laddie think alone

    Upon your insincerity.

    A sorrowful 16th-century love ballad reimagined as a yuletide hymn: heavy bolts of oakmoss-colored velvet, a heart of gold weeping sticky tears of balsam.

    Artwork by Dante Gabriel Rossetti, 1863

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  • Hand-Knitted Witch Gloves

    Hand-Knitted Witch Gloves 2025 Perfume Oil

    A 2023 Halloween concoction which maybe should’ve been a Yule all along! Wooly and witchy, fuzzy and scuzzy, long green fingers tipped with ruby-red nails: raw wool, sweet oakmoss, and cranberry brandy.

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  • HANUKKAWEEN

    Hanukkaween Perfume Oil

    A festival of frights. A jolly, hulking golem dressed in a gloriously tacky sweater: honey-dipped amber and pocket-warmed gelt, a basket of pumpkin rugelach, a smushed sufganiyah, and a touch of latke grease.

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  • HE FORGOT TO BE FRIGHTENED ANY MORE

    He Forgot to be Frightened Any More Perfume Oil

    “Piglet,” said Rabbit, taking out a pencil, and licking the end of it, “you haven’t any pluck.”

     

    “It is hard to be brave,” said Piglet, sniffing slightly, “when you’re only a Very Small Animal.”

     

    Rabbit, who had begun to write very busily, looked up and said:

     

    “It is because you are a very small animal that you will be Useful in the adventure before us.”

     

    Piglet was so excited at the idea of being Useful, that he forgot to be frightened any more…

     

    Pink clover and wild strawberries, red bean paste, pink vanilla, sweet acorns, apple blossom, caramelized almond, and a shy puff of sugar.

     

     

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  • His Grasp Is So Cold

    His Grasp is so Cold Perfume Oil

    “O come and go with me, no longer delay,
    Or else, silly child, I will drag thee away.” —
    “O father! O father! now, now keep your hold,
    The Erl-King has seized me — his grasp is so cold!”

    The spell breaks like a sudden crack in an ice-bound lake. Opoponax incense and black oud plunging into a heart-stopping shiver of ambergris accord and eucalyptus leaf.

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  • IF BEARS WERE BEES, IF BEES WERE BEARS

    If Bears Were Bees, If Bees Were Bears Perfume Oil

    Winnie-the-Pooh sat down at the foot of the tree, put his head between his paws and began to think.

     

    First of all he said to himself: “That buzzing-noise means something. You don’t get a buzzing-noise like that, just buzzing and buzzing, without its meaning something. If there’s a buzzing-noise, somebody’s making a buzzing-noise, and the only reason for making a buzzing-noise that I know of is because you’re a bee.”

     

    Then he thought another long time, and said: “And the only reason for being a bee that I know of is making honey.”

     

    And then he got up, and said: “And the only reason for making honey is so as I can eat it.” So he began to climb the tree.

     

    He climbed and he climbed and he climbed, and as he climbed he sang a little song to himself. It went like this:

     

    Isn’t it funny

    How a bear likes honey?

    Buzz! Buzz! Buzz!

    I wonder why he does?

     

    Then he climbed a little further … and a little further … and then just a little further. By that time he had thought of another song.

     

    It’s a very funny thought that, if Bears were Bees,

    They’d build their nests at the bottom of trees.

    And that being so (if the Bees were Bears),

    We shouldn’t have to climb up all these stairs.

     

    He was getting rather tired by this time, so that is why he sang a Complaining Song. He was nearly there now, and if he just stood on that branch …

     

    Crack!

     

    “Oh, help!” said Pooh, as he dropped ten feet on the branch below him.

     

    The bees were still buzzing as suspiciously as ever. A golden gourmand for a philosopher. Wild clover honey buzzing with mead fizz, a gust of woodsmoke, and a dusting of ambered pollen.

     

     

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  • In Doubt And In Dread

    In Doubt in Dread Perfume Oil

    Sore trembled the father; he spurr’d thro’ the wild,
    Clasping close to his bosom his shuddering child;
    He reaches his dwelling in doubt and in dread,
    But, clasp’d to his bosom, the infant was dead!

    The death of innocence, a dirge for joy: black currant, labdanum tar, and myrrh.

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  • Indigestion Perfume Oil

    A sticky brown sphere of black treacle, dried fruits, and brandy with a double honk of marshmallow fluff and buttercream.

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  • It Was But The Wild Blast

    It was Wild but the Wild Blast as it Sung Thro’ the Trees Perfume Oil

    “O, father, my father, and did you not hear
    The Erl-King whisper so low in my ear?” —
    “Be still, my heart’s darling — my child, be at ease;
    It was but the wild blast as it sung thro’ the trees.”

    A desperate attempt at comfort and assurances of safety. Honeyed oats, toasted clove, hazelnuts, hay, and skin-warmed wool.

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  • Jacob's Ladder

    Jacob’s Ladder 2025 Perfume Oil

    And Jacob went out from Beersheba, and went toward Haran.

     

    And he lighted upon a certain place, and tarried there all night, because the sun was set; and he took of the stones of that place, and put them for his pillows, and lay down in that place to sleep.

     

    And he dreamed, and behold a ladder set up on the earth, and the top of it reached to heaven: and behold the angels of God ascending and descending on it.

     

    And, behold, the Lord stood above it, and said, I am the Lord God of Abraham thy father, and the God of Isaac: the land whereon thou liest, to thee will I give it, and to thy seed;

     

    And thy seed shall be as the dust of the earth, and thou shalt spread abroad to the west, and to the east, and to the north, and to the south: and in thee and in thy seed shall all the families of the earth be blessed.

     

    And, behold, I am with thee, and will keep thee in all places whither thou goest, and will bring thee again into this land; for I will not leave thee, until I have done that which I have spoken to thee of.

     

    And Jacob awaked out of his sleep, and he said, Surely the Lord is in this place; and I knew it not.

     

    And he was afraid, and said, How dreadful is this place! this is none other but the house of God, and this is the gate of heaven.

     

    The meeting of Heaven and Earth: golden amber, galbanum, benzoin, ambrette, rockrose, costus and tonka.

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  • Julween

    Julween Perfume Oil

    A long, chilled night where tomtenisse cavort in the deep forests with the spectral revenants of autumn. Lingonberry jam, clove bud, frankincense smoke, frost-laden skeletal branches, and steaming bowls of tomtegröt

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  • SantaVsTheGoths Justin

    Justin Perfume Oil

    Candy cane wrappers, eyeliner smudges, and an oversized black licorice hoodie.

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  • Krampus

    Krampus 2025 Perfume Oil

    Anything BUT jolly! Draped with chains and bells, wielding both whip and rod, this rag-clad, horned, red-skinned, soot-covered leering creature is both the companion and the antithesis of rosy-cheeked and ebullient Kris Kringle. He is called by many names, and, in a myriad of cultures, he is seen with different robes and faces, but he is nevertheless always a sinister and fearsome instrument of Santa’s wrath: he wields a switch on all irredeemably naughty children before tossing them into his large black sack and whisking them away.

     

    Be good, or Krampus will toss you in a river! Sinister red musk, black leather, dusty rags, and wooden switches.

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  • Lavender Apron Atmosphere Spray

    Lavender Apron Atmosphere Spray

    A sturdy but soft lavender cotton twill, lightly flour- and sugar-dusted, with deep pockets full of kitchen mysteries.

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  • Lavender Carrot Cake

    Lavender Carrot Cake Perfume Oil

    Nothing beats that classic fluffy, bouncy texture, rendered eternally moist thanks to shreds of fresh carrot, delicately spiced and slathered in lavender cream cheese icing – including the obligatory carrot on top, piped in purple frosting

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  • Lavender Honey Wine

    Lavender Honey Wine Perfume Oil

    A goblet of pale liquid gold infused with an almost iridescent shimmer of lavender essence.

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  • Lavender Kitchen Mouse Hair Gloss

    Lavender Kitchen Mouse Hair Gloss

    Lavender cotton candy fur and vanilla popcorn balls, sent skittering out of the kitchen with a good-natured wave of our polished wood rolling pin.

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  • Lavender Marshmallow Sundae

    Lavender Marshmallow Sundae Perfume Oil

    A rapidly melting tower of vanilla ice cream thoroughly glooped with marshmallow sauce and amethyst syrup, speared with shards of waffle cone.

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  • Lavender Rosemary Seed Bread

    Lavender Rosemary Seed Bread Perfume Oil

    An aromatic crusty loaf covered in pre-bake slashes to create a floral pattern on top, flecked with flax, sesame, pumpkin seeds.

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  • Lavender Semlor

    Lavender Semlor Perfume Oil

    A row of plump, cardamom-spiced sweet buns overflowing with pooflets of lavender cream and almond paste.

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  • Lavender Ube Mochi Donut

    Lavender Ube Mochi Donut Perfume Oil

    A chewy delight made from a blend of rice flour and purple yam, fried in lavender-infused oil and dusted with granulated sugar.

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  • Le Tits Now

    LE TITS NOW Perfume Oil

    A festive and urgently mammalian response to inclement weather: a pair of blushing musks daubed with French lavender, flecks of fresh snow, and trickles of chilled champagne.

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  • Let Them Eat Cake Perfume Oil

    Buttercream-frosted angel food cake and a smear of strawberry lip gloss.

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  • libanotos

    Libanotos Beard Oil

    In former times, when they had fewer opportunities of selling it, they used to gather the frankincense only once a year; but at the present day, as there is a much greater demand for it, there is a second crop as well. The first, and what we may call the natural, vintage, takes place about the rising of the Dog-star, a period when the heat is most intense; on which occasion they cut the tree where the bark appears to be the fullest of juice, and extremely thin, from being distended to the greatest extent. The incision thus made is gradually extended, but nothing is removed; the consequence of which is, that an unctuous foam oozes forth, which gradually coagulates and thickens. When the nature of the locality requires it, this juice is received upon mats of palm-leaves, though in some places the space around the tree is made hard by being well rammed down for the purpose. The frankincense that is gathered after the former method, is in the purest state, though that which falls on the ground is the heaviest in weight: that which adheres to the tree is pared off with an iron instrument, which accounts for its being found mingled with pieces of bark.

    – Pliny the Elder

     

    Frankincense, terebinth, and Italian bergamot.

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  • Lick It With Consent

    Lick it With Consent 2025 Perfume Oil

    A sugar-crusted vanilla peppermint stick!

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  • LINES WRITTEN BY A BEAR OF VERY LITTLE BRAIN

    Lines Written by a Bear of Very Little Brain Perfume Oil

    On Monday, when the sun is hot

    I wonder to myself a lot:

    “Now is it true, or is it not,

    “That what is which and which is what?”

    On Tuesday, when it hails and snows,

    The feeling on me grows and grows

    That hardly anybody knows

    If those are these or these are those.

    On Wednesday, when the sky is blue,

    And I have nothing else to do,

    I sometimes wonder if it’s true

    That who is what and what is who.

    On Thursday, when it starts to freeze

    And hoar-frost twinkles on the trees,

    How very readily one sees

    That these are whose—but whose are these?

    On Friday——

     

    Hot, sunny cardamom amber and milky musk, honeyed rice and snowy slush.

     

     

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  • Lured With Cinnamon Balls

    Lured With Cinnamon Balls Perfume Oil

    A fatal temptation: vanilla bean paste, allspice, ground almond accord, cinnamon sugar, golden caster sugar, and a dusting of icing sugar.

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  • SantaVsTheGoths Mabel

    Mabel Perfume Oil

    Black lipstick and frozen cherry slush.

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  • Many A Fair Toy, Many A Fine Flower

    Many a Fair Toy, Many a Fine Flower Perfume Oil

    (Tke Erl-King speaks.)
     
    “O come and go with me, thou loveliest child;
    By many a gay sport shall thy time be beguiled;
    My mother keeps for thee full many a fair toy,
    And many a fine flower shall she pluck for my boy.”

    The promise of dew-bright meadows and sugar-spun toys, gleaming and hollow: apple peel, wild violet, meadowsweet, and candied blood-red fruits.

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  • Maraschino Babydoll

    Maraschino Babydoll Perfume Oil

    Liqueur-soaked twin cherries reeling from a double pony-kick of pink pepper and white ginger.

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  • Midnight Mass Atmosphere Spray

    This perfume is a traditional Roman Catholic sacramental incense, most often used during a Solemn Mass. Traditionally, five tears of this incense, each encased individually in wax that has been fashioned into the shape of a nail, are inserted into the paschal candle. This, of course, represents the Five Wounds of Our Risen Savior. Symbolically, the burning of the incense signifies spiritual fervor, the fragrance itself inspires virtue, and the rising smoke carries our prayers to God.


    I will wash my hands among the innocent; and will compass thy altar, O Lord: That I may hear the voice of thy praise: and tell of all thy wondrous works. I have loved, O Lord, the beauty of thy house; and the place where thy glory dwelleth. Take not away my soul, O God, with the wicked: nor my life with bloody men: In whose hands are iniquities: their right hand is filled with gifts.

     

    But as for me, I have walked in my innocence: redeem me, and have mercy on me. My foot hath stood in the direct way: in the churches I will bless thee, O Lord.

     

    In Roman Catholic tradition, the Christmas season begins liturgically on Christmas Eve, though it is forbidden to celebrate the Christmas Mass before midnight. The most devout attend Midnight Mass, celebrating both the Eucharist and the drama of the Nativity.

     

    Credo in unum Deum, Patrem omnipotentem, factorem caeli et terrae, visibilium omnium et invisibilium.

     

    Et in unum Dominum Iesum Christum, Filium Dei unigenitum, et ex Patre natum ante omnia saecula. Deum de Deo, Lumen de Lumine, Deum verum de Deo vero, genitum non factum, consubstantialem Patri; per quem omnia facta sunt. Qui propter nos homines et propter nostram salutem descendit de caelis. Et incarnatus est de Spiritu Sancto ex Maria Virgine, et homo factus est. Crucifixus etiam pro nobis sub Pontio Pilato, passus et sepultus est, et resurrexit tertia die, secundum Scripturas, et ascendit in caelum, sedet ad dexteram Patris. Et iterum venturus est cum gloria, iudicare vivos et mortuos, cuius regni non erit finis.

     

    Et in Spiritum Sanctum, Dominum et vivificantem, qui ex Patre procedit. Qui cum Patre et Filio simul adoratur et conglorificatur: qui locutus est per prophetas. Et unam, sanctam, catholicam et apostolicam Ecclesiam. Confiteor unum baptisma in remissionem peccatorum. Et expecto resurrectionem mortuorum, et vitam venturi saeculi. Amen.

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  • Midnight Mass Perfume Oil

    This perfume is a traditional Roman Catholic sacramental incense, most often used during a Solemn Mass. Traditionally, five tears of this incense, each encased individually in wax that has been fashioned into the shape of a nail, are inserted into the paschal candle. This is, of course, represents the Five Wounds of Our Risen Savior. Symbolically, the burning of the incense signifies spiritual fervor, the fragrance itself inspires virtue, and the rising smoke carries our prayers to God.


    I will wash my hands among the innocent; and will compass thy altar, O Lord: That I may hear the voice of thy praise: and tell of all thy wondrous works. I have loved, O Lord, the beauty of thy house; and the place where thy glory dwelleth. Take not away my soul, O God, with the wicked: nor my life with bloody men: In whose hands are iniquities: their right hand is filled with gifts.

     

    But as for me, I have walked in my innocence: redeem me, and have mercy on me. My foot hath stood in the direct way: in the churches I will bless thee, O Lord.

     

    In Roman Catholic tradition, the Christmas season begins liturgically on Christmas Eve, though it is forbidden to celebrate the Christmas Mass before midnight. The most devout attend Midnight Mass, celebrating both the Eucharist and the drama of the Nativity.

     

    Credo in unum Deum, Patrem omnipotentem, factorem caeli et terrae, visibilium omnium et invisibilium.

     

    Et in unum Dominum Iesum Christum, Filium Dei unigenitum, et ex Patre natum ante omnia saecula. Deum de Deo, Lumen de Lumine, Deum verum de Deo vero, genitum non factum, consubstantialem Patri; per quem omnia facta sunt. Qui propter nos homines et propter nostram salutem descendit de caelis. Et incarnatus est de Spiritu Sancto ex Maria Virgine, et homo factus est. Crucifixus etiam pro nobis sub Pontio Pilato, passus et sepultus est, et resurrexit tertia die, secundum Scripturas, et ascendit in caelum, sedet ad dexteram Patris. Et iterum venturus est cum gloria, iudicare vivos et mortuos, cuius regni non erit finis.

     

    Et in Spiritum Sanctum, Dominum et vivificantem, qui ex Patre procedit. Qui cum Patre et Filio simul adoratur et conglorificatur: qui locutus est per prophetas. Et unam, sanctam, catholicam et apostolicam Ecclesiam. Confiteor unum baptisma in remissionem peccatorum. Et expecto resurrectionem mortuorum, et vitam venturi saeculi. Amen.

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  • mureera

    Mureera Beard Oil

    According to some authors, myrrh is the produce of a tree that grows in the same forests as the incense-tree, though most say that they grow in different places: but the fact is that myrrh grows in many parts of Arabia, as will be seen when we come to speak of the several varieties of it. A sort that is highly esteemed is brought from the islands also, and the Sabæi even cross the sea to procure it in the country of the Troglodytæ. It is grown also by being transplanted, and when thus cultivated is greatly preferred to that which is grown in the forests. The plant is greatly improved by raking and baring the roots; indeed, the cooler the roots are kept, the better it is.

    – Pliny the Elder

    Kataf myrrh, smoked sandalwood, and vanilla bean.

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  • nuts cracker

    Nuts Cracker Perfume Oil

    His appetite is insatiable! Crumbs of gnawed marzipan and toasted hazelnuts tumbling through a thicket of patchouli and gunpowder and bouncing off of a throbbing cherrywood ramrod.

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  • Old Books And A Flat White

    Old Books and a Flat White Perfume Oil

    Dust-soft vellum, cracked leather, and yellowed pages exhaling their ghost of vanillin, a triple shot of espresso, and a deft swirl of warm, velvety microfoam.

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  • ONE HAS TO BE CAREFUL

    One has to be Careful Perfume Oil

    Well, he was humming this hum to himself, and walking along gaily, wondering what everybody else was doing, and what it felt like, being somebody else, when suddenly he came to a sandy bank, and in the bank was a large hole.

     

    “Aha!” said Pooh. (Rum-tum-tiddle-um-tum.) “If I know anything about anything, that hole means Rabbit,” he said, “and Rabbit means Company,” he said, “and Company means Food and Listening-to-Me-Humming and such like. Rum-tum-tum-tiddle-um.”

     

    So he bent down, put his head into the hole, and called out:

     

    “Is anybody at home?”

     

    There was a sudden scuffling noise from inside the hole, and then silence.

     

    “What I said was, ‘Is anybody at home?'” called out Pooh very loudly.

     

    “No!” said a voice; and then added, “You needn’t shout so loud. I heard you quite well the first time.”

     

    “Bother!” said Pooh. “Isn’t there anybody here at all?”

     

    “Nobody.”

     

    Winnie-the-Pooh took his head out of the hole, and thought for a little, and he thought to himself, “There must be somebody there, because somebody must have said ‘Nobody.'” So he put his head back in the hole, and said:

     

    “Hallo, Rabbit, isn’t that you?”

     

    “No,” said Rabbit, in a different sort of voice this time.

     

    “But isn’t that Rabbit’s voice?”

     

    “I don’t think so,” said Rabbit. “It isn’t meant to be.”

     

    “Oh!” said Pooh.

     

    He took his head out of the hole, and had another think, and then he put it back, and said:

     

    “Well, could you very kindly tell me where Rabbit is?”

     

    “He has gone to see his friend Pooh Bear, who is a great friend of his.”

     

    “But this is Me!” said Bear, very much surprised.

     

    “What sort of Me?”

     

    “Pooh Bear.”

     

    “Are you sure?” said Rabbit, still more surprised.

     

    “Quite, quite sure,” said Pooh.

     

    “Oh, well, then, come in.”

     

    So Pooh pushed and pushed and pushed his way through the hole, and at last he got in.

     

    “You were quite right,” said Rabbit, looking at him all over. “It is you. Glad to see you.”

     

    “Who did you think it was?”

     

    “Well, I wasn’t sure. You know how it is in the Forest. One can’t have anybody coming into one’s house. One has to be careful. What about a mouthful of something?”

     

    Pooh always liked a little something at eleven o’clock in the morning, and he was very glad to see Rabbit getting out the plates and mugs; and when Rabbit said, “Honey or condensed milk with your bread?” he was so excited that he said, “Both,” and then, so as not to seem greedy, he added, “But don’t bother about the bread, please.” And for a long time after that he said nothing … until at last, humming to himself in a rather sticky voice, he got up, shook Rabbit lovingly by the paw, and said that he must be going on.

     

    “Must you?” said Rabbit politely.

     

    “Well,” said Pooh, “I could stay a little longer if it—if you——” and he tried very hard to look in the direction of the larder.

     

    “As a matter of fact,” said Rabbit, “I was going out myself directly.”

     

    “Oh, well, then, I’ll be going on. Good-bye.”

     

    “Well, good-bye, if you’re sure you won’t have any more.”

     

    “Is there any more?” asked Pooh quickly.

     

    Rabbit took the covers off the dishes, and said, “No, there wasn’t.”

     

    “I thought not,” said Pooh, nodding to himself. “Well, good-bye. I must be going on.”

     

    The Hundred Acre Wood’s resident Virgo (affectionate). The scent of neat rows and polite refusals: toasted oats and clover honey, crushed lemon verbena, wild carrot leaf, and white tea poured with exacting care. A dab of condensed milk on a clean spoon, a faint rustle of vetiver, and a courteous cough to suggest that your visit has gone on quite long enough.

     

     

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  • Peacock Queen

    Peacock Queen 2025 Perfume Oil

    In dramatic contrast to the soft innocence of Snow White and the dew-kissed freshness of her sister, Rose Red, this is a blood red, voluptuous rose, velvet-petaled, at the height of bloom. Haughty and imperious, vain, yet incomparably lovely to the eye, but thick with thorns of jealousy, pride and hatred.

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  • Peacock Queen

    Peacock Queen Lotion

    In dramatic contrast to the soft innocence of Snow White and the dew-kissed freshness of her sister, Rose Red, this is a blood red, voluptuous rose, velvet-petaled, at the height of bloom. Haughty and imperious, vain, yet incomparably lovely to the eye, but thick with thorns of jealousy, pride and hatred.

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  • playdate with krampus

    Playdate with Krampus Perfume Oil

    I don’t know if all kids love Krampus, but mine sure does. She first met him a decade ago at Dark Delicacies, where he was portrayed by our dear friend, Bill Rude. She loves Krampus so much that we took her to the Gnigl Krampuslauf in Salzburg in 2017. Her intention to join the Los Angeles Krampuslauf as a wee Krampus was curtailed by the pandemic, but hope springs eternal.

    Kids love horror. They’re attracted to the strange, the uncanny, the mysterious. This is why they love characters like Krampus, despite the threat of being scooped up into a bag and tossed into a river.

    Kids embrace horror. They always have. Children understand that the world is stitched together with shadows, and that sometimes the shadows have teeth. They’re drawn to the strange, the uncanny, the impossible; they see the edges where reality blurs. Horror is not a trespass for them, but a playground: a place where the monstrous becomes knowable, where fear becomes understanding. Terror tales are a ritualized fear, safely cocooned in myth. This is why they love figures like Krampus, even with his clanking chains and sacks full of disobedient little souls. To a child, Krampus is not simply a morality lesson or a grim parental warning – he’s a symbol of freedom, of things that are wild, dark, and uncontrolled.

    Children instinctively know that monsters serve a purpose, that they give shape to anxieties too formless to name. They let kids practice both bravery and defiance, and they teach kids that though the world can be frightening and unpredictable, they can traverse its tangled forests and survive the darkness. I believe that children also know in the deepest part of their mythic, dreaming souls that monsters protect, challenge, and guide. Sometimes, the monster under the bed is the only one who truly understands you.

     

    Kids love Krampus, not in spite of his menace, but because of it. His is the shadow that makes the light shine brighter, and the rattle of his chains reminds them that stories, both light and dark, belong to them.

     

    A playdate with monsters: crimson musk stirred into molten sugar, ruby pomegranate syrup, tart cherries, a dusting of clove-spun candyfloss, and a drizzle of warm vanilla resin.

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  • pomegranate and black fig
  • pomegranate and black pine
  • pomegranate and burning leaves
  • pomegranate and cathedral incense
  • pomegranate and pistachio cream
  • pomegranate and plum tea

    Pomegranate and Plum Tea Hair Gloss

    And a drop of wildflower honey.

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  • pomegranate and red rose
  • pomegranate and scarlet chypre
  • pomegranate and smoked cacao
  • pomegranate candy canes
  • pomegranate loukoumi and champagne
  • pomegranate molasses
  • pomegranate popcorn
  • pomegranate slush

    Pomegranate Slush Hair Gloss

    A snowy, chilled pomegranate slurry.

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  • Pumpkin Spice Eggnog Latte

    Pumpkin Spice Eggnog Latte Perfume Oil

    Pumpkin custard swirled with thick eggnog, dark roast coffee, grated nutmeg, soft cinnamon, and a drizzle of brown-sugar syrup.

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  • red amber and pomegranate
  • Red Rose Hair Gloss

    We have resurrected Black Phoenix Trading Post’s sensual 2009 masterpiece. Red rose buds, with amber, clove, tonka, Indian musk, fir, and tobacco.

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  • SantaVsTheGoths Retch

    Retch Perfume Oil

    Unkempt oudh and hot chocolate spiked with booze from a hidden flask.

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  • Rose Red

    Rose Red 2025 Perfume Oil

    The perfected winter rose, dew covered and freshly cut.

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  • santa doesnt need your help

    Santa Doesn’t Need Your Help 2025 Atmosphere Spray

    A calming, affirming fragrance to help motivate Santa through the daunting tasks which await him year after year: sugar plum lavender marshmallows.

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  • Santa Doesn't Need Your Help

    Santa Doesn’t Need Your Help 2025 Perfume Oil

    A calming, affirming fragrance to help motivate Santa through the daunting tasks which await him year after year: sugar plum lavender marshmallows.

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  • Shitfaced Robins Perfume Oil

    Red winter berries crushed under tiny claws, fermented wild cherry and mulled brandy spilling into russet feathers. 

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  • Skogtroll

    Skogtroll 2025 Perfume Oil

    Our gruesome blend of ghastly greens and blacks, now streaked with blue-white: frozen and snow-packed vetiver, pine pitch, troll musk, elemi, camphor, black basil, eucalyptus blossom, clove smoke, and scorched cumin

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  • SantaVsTheGoths Smithereena

    Smithereena Perfume Oil

    Black leather flecked with remnants of a gloopy food court cinnamon bun.

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  • snake oil and candied pomegranate
  • Snakes In The Coffee Beans

    Snakes in the Coffee Beans Perfume Oil

    The dark, roasted bite of freshly crushed coffee beans folded into the sinuous heat of Snake Oil’s infamous bestseller. Bitter espresso grounds smoldering under a curled-up hiss of sugared patchouli, spiced amber, and velvety vanilla.

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  • Snow White 2025 Atmosphere Spray

    A chilly, bright perfume: flurries of virgin snow, crisp winter wind and the faintest breath of night-blooming flowers.

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  • Snow White 2025 Perfume Oil

    A chilly, bright perfume: flurries of virgin snow, crisp winter wind and the faintest breath of night-blooming flowers.

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  • Snow White

    Snow White Lotion

    A chilly, bright perfume: flurries of virgin snow, crisp winter wind and the faintest breath of night-blooming flowers.

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  • Snowman Beatdown Perfume Oil

    A jolly Christmas for some. For others? Not so much. Frosted sage, icy green and menacing.

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  • So Devilish Hard Perfume Oil

    The weather’s cold, so devilish hard
    My income friend, 
    is suffering from the cramp,
    So please excuse this impecunious card,
    As all I’m good for is a used up.

    Sugared-crusted marshmallows and cinnamon candies.

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  • Strawberry Cotton Candy Sufganiyot

    Strawberry Cotton Candy Sufganiyot Perfume Oil

    Strawberry preserves twisting through clouds of pink cotton candy and marshmallow fluff.

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  • Sugar Cookie Hair Gloss

    A BPAL favorite since 2005, affectionately nicknamed ‘The Devil’s Bake Sale.’

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  • Sugar Cookie Lotion

    A BPAL favorite since 2005, affectionately nicknamed ‘The Devil’s Bake Sale.’

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  • The Crumpet-Fanlight Expedition

    The Crumpet-fanlight Expedition Perfume Oil

    A bitterly cold, bone-white chypre, austere polar musk, vegan ambergris, and white tea combine to make a genteel, frigid perfume as bright and sharp as the first crack of glacial ice.

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  • The Erl-King's Pale Daughter

    The Erl-King’s Pale Daughter Perfume Oil

    “O father, my father, and saw you not plain,
    The Erl-King’s pale daughter glide past thro’ the rain?” —
    “O yes, my loved treasure, I knew it full soon;
    It was the grey willow that danced to the moon.”

    Moonlit mist clinging to skin the color of ghost lilies, pearlescent and cold. A spectral musk possessing the sheen of river water at night.

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  • The Flame of the Bear

    The Flame of the Bear Perfume Oil

    An incense for Solstice rites: fir resin, bayberry, myrrh, mistletoe, and oak bark.

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  • The Huntsman

    The Huntsman Perfume Oil

    Then she summoned a huntsman and said to him, “Take Snow-White out into the woods. I never want to see her again. Kill her, and as proof that she is dead bring her lungs and her liver back to me.”

     

    The huntsman obeyed and took Snow-White into the woods. He took out his hunting knife and was about to stab it into her innocent heart when she began to cry, saying, “Oh, dear huntsman, let me live. I will run into the wild woods and never come back.”

     

    Because she was so beautiful the huntsman took pity on her, and he said, “Run away, you poor child.”

     

    Mercy interrupting violence: well-worn leather shadowed by pine boughs, moss-slick bark, bloodroot and steel, and a tremble of wild apple.

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  • The Inexorable Finger

    The Inexorable Finger 2025 Perfume Oil

    “The house is yonder,” Scrooge exclaimed. “Why do you point away?”

    The inexorable finger underwent no change.

     

    Black patchouli, obsidian, and oudh.

     

    Illustration by Charles Green

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  • The Poinsettia Gown 2025 Perfume Oil

    A perfume simply inspired by a vintage Christmas postcard. Rose cream, jasmine cream, mallow, vanilla foam, and sweet amber.

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  • The Poinsettia Gown Hair Gloss

    A perfume simply inspired by a vintage Christmas postcard. Rose cream, jasmine cream, mallow, vanilla foam, and sweet amber.

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  • hundred acre wood

    The Whole Hundred Acres Perfume Oil Set

    Buy all six scents in the set, and get a Donkey Tail imp for free!

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  • The Woodland So Wild

    The Woodlands so Wild Perfume Oil

    O, who rides by night thro’ the woodland so wild?
    It is the fond father embracing his child;
    And close the boy nestles within his loved arm,
    To hold himself fast, and to keep himself warm.

    The pale sugared blossoms of innocence wrapped tightly in sleet-soaked arms. Vanilla bourbon, cream peony, and white carnation enveloped in a warm, protective fortress of tonka, white cedar, orris root, red amber, and leather.

     

    HIS CROWN AND HIS SHROUD

    “O father, see yonder! see yonder!” he says;

    “My boy, upon what doest thou fearfully gaze?” —

    “O, ’tis the Erl-King with his crown and his shroud.”

    “No, my son, it is but a dark wreath of the cloud.”

     

    A dread shape forms in the mist: chilled white musk, rain-soaked earth, and a gleam of blackened steel.

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  • With Care And With Joy

    With Care and With Joy Perfume Oil

    “O wilt thou go with me, thou loveliest boy?
    My daughter shall tend thee with care and with joy;
    She shall bear thee so lightly thro’ wet and thro’ wild,
    And press thee, and kiss thee, and sing to my child.”

    An ethereal lure crafted with milk and honey.

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  • Woodland Gang Initiation Perfume Oil

    By loving friends you are surrounded,
    Oh, be not blindd to this, I pray.
    They wish that joy and mirth unbounded
    May crown your happy Christmas day.

    Winter oak, hazelnuts, and butterscotch rum.

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  • yellow snowballs

    Yellow Snowballs Lotion

    Slushy white mint, vanilla cream, lemon drops, grapefruit, and yuzu!

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