• A sleek, roll-on bottle of "radio bombay" perfume oil, next to its minimalist packaging.

Radio Bombay

10 mL Pocket Perfume (oil-based rollerball)

Afterpay Available

Transistor radio hewn of sandalwood radiates ragas in the Bandra heat. Hot copper tubes warm the soft wood releasing blooms of musk, cream, peach, ambrette, coco, cedar distillates.

Top Notes

  • radiant wood
  • copper
  • cedar

Heart Notes

  • sandalwood
  • radiant iris
  • boronia

Base Notes

  • balsam fir absolute
  • coconut musc
  • ambergris

Afterpay available on U.S. orders $50+

A close-up view of a tangled mess of wires in various metallic colors.

I am interested in hypothetical scent. Not everything has a strong or readily perceivable aroma, but objects can suggest a fragrance. Light bulbs glow. Electricity courses through their metal filaments. They melt the dust on their surface emitting wisps of heat. The tubes in amplifiers have a certain aroma. When my ‘69 Fender Deluxe gets heated-up (after rip-roaring monster shredding), the back of the amp produces a hot dusty metallic grease perfume—the scent of backstage in a humid venue.

So what if there was a tube amplifier in an old radio made of sandalwood? Then the interaction of the heat would open up the pores of the wood, singing its smooth elegant fragrance - puffs of musky cedar, peach, coconut, lactones, milk.

Real sandalwood essence is perfection. I often wear it neat. It smells of India, effigies, purity, focus. Unfortunately, it has been overharvested, so perfumers don’t use the oil from Mysore anymore.

Radio Bombay is a deconstruction of the Mysore santal rebuilt from all the aspects written above. I imagine the radio sitting in a small hot shop in Bandra —the “Brooklyn” of Bombay (sorry). The heat deconstructs the oils in the wood. Ragas and Geeta Dutt tunes jangle out of its tiny speaker in the busy city.-D.S.

PLAYLIST

Ingredients

Fragrance (Parfum), Simmondsia Chinensis (Jojoba) Seed Oil, Citral, Coumarin, Limonene, Linalool

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