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God of Fire

Nose invites you to dive into the incandescent universe of God of Fire, through an exclusive video from the "Pschit..." series. Poet, painter and perfumer, Stéphane Humbert Lucas founded his eponymous house in 2012. Driven by a rare synesthesia — each colour triggering an olfactory perception in him — he composes his fragrances like visual works of art.

A note in its raw state: Amber X-treme

It all starts with Amber X-treme — a trending note in contemporary perfumery, delivering an agarwood punch of rare intensity. The material is powerful, almost hostile to nuance. It resists, it imposes, it easily overwhelms everything around it.

For Stéphane Humbert Lucas, the whole challenge lay there: it wasn't simply a matter of incorporating Amber X-treme, but of taming it by finding the ingredient capable of channelling it without masking it.

Mango as a creative response

Mango was the answer. A choice both instinctive and precise: the fruit evokes exoticism, sunshine, the sea. A luminous horizon set against the smoky density of agarwood.

Mango doesn't simply soften — it contrasts. It brings colour, lightness, an almost aquatic texture that gives the wood room to breathe. It is from this tension that God of Fire draws its singularity.

Why wear God of Fire?

God of Fire speaks to those who aren't looking for discretion. It is a fragrance of presence, built around a sharp duality: the force of fire, the warmth of the sun. The name says it all — and the juice delivers on the promise.

A creation that perfectly illustrates Stéphane Humbert Lucas's signature: demanding contrasts, a central raw material pushed to its limits, and immediate legibility despite the complexity.

Discover God of Fire and the Stéphane Humbert Lucas universe in our selection below.

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