The fragrances in this sampler will surround you with the melancholy essence of ghosts. In folklore, a ghost is the soul or spirit of a dead person or non-human animal that is believed by some people to be able to appear to the living. In ghostlore, descriptions of ghosts vary widely, from an invisible presence to translucent or barely visible wispy shapes to realistic, lifelike forms, whether they resemble humans or animals.
You will receive a 1/2ml sample (1ml sample vial filled half full) of each of the fragrances in this sampler.
- Arcana Wildcraft Haint Perfume Oil - The sweet, melancholy essence of a Southern ghost drifting through dark mountain hollows and crumbling neo-classical mansions. White musk, vanilla musk, Madagascar vanilla, sugarcane, and a faint trail of white pepper.
- Freyja's Daughters Bayou Bride Perfume Oil - In the drowned hush of Louisiana’s forgotten swamps, they speak of brides who never made it to the altar...women veiled in sorrow, swallowed by fog, and bound to the bayou by love that curdled into legend. Some whisper of the Bride of Bayou Sale Road, seen drifting along the water’s edge in a gown stained with river silt. Her presence is marked by the scent of orchid and smoke, and the sudden chill of phantom mist curling through cypress knees. Others recall the Ghost of Manchac Swamp, a woman said to have cursed her wedding day with a song that summoned a hurricane. She vanished beneath the floodwaters, leaving behind only the perfume of moss and mourning. These brides do not rest. They linger in the rot and bloom of the wetlands, trailing vanilla and decay, their footsteps muffled by mud and memory. Spanish moss hangs like tattered lace from the trees, and the air grows thick with longing, ripe with the scent of wood softened by time, of orchids blooming where no light reaches. Bayou Bride is not a tribute to one ghost, but to all who loved too fiercely and were claimed by the swamp. It is a fragrance of drowned vows and spectral beauty, of fog wrapped grief and floral resurrection. It smells like decaying wood, bayou water, river fog, Spanish moss, cypress, orchid, vanilla, smoke and humid air. With notes of vanilla, vetiver, orchid, oakmoss, smoke and cypress.
- Obscura Hortus Lady Anne’s Ghost Garden Perfume Oil - Lady Anne Conway was a 17th century English philosopher who made important contributions to thoughts on nature and the ways of the physical world. She was known for her seance parties she held late at night in her home, Ragley Castle. On this night, a thunderstorm has begun, the wind wildly blows, howling through trees and cracks in the stone walls. The frail, gaunt and pale lady of the house welcomes you into her dimly lit parlor to speak to spirits! A smoky rose, gardenia and coffee brew, punctuated by wisps of sandalwood and vetiver ghosts, cardamom, tonka bean and a hint of clove. A deep intoxicating scent conjuring images of dripping wax on candlesticks, dim lanterns casting a ghostly glow on walls, piles of old books, elegant tapestries lining ancient hallways and the feeling that you are not alone in the darkness. Witchy and feminine, haunting and mysterious.
- Sixteen92 A Voice in the Parlor Extrait de Parfum – Part of Sixteen92’s 2025 Holiday A Midwinter Séance Collection, A Voice in the Parlor brings to mind long winter nights that once beckoned the living to gather around the flicker of flame and call across the veil. Inspired by Victorian spiritualist traditions and haunted holiday parlors, this collection conjures flickering candlelight, ghostly whispers, and the lingering presence of those who never truly left. A soft violet-vanilla apparition drifting through a time-worn parlor. With notes of sugared violet lozenge, worn upholstery velvet and antique lace, snowmelt, ectoplasm and pale vanilla powder.
- Sorcellerie 2 A.M. in Lafayette Extrait de Parfum – An earthy gourmand that was created after the perfumer and her husband experienced paranormal activity in a bed and breakfast in Lafayette, Louisiana. They fled at 2 a.m. and didn't stop driving until they reached Mississippi. Rich vanilla, milky coffee, caramel and beignets dusted with powdered sugar sound like the perfect comforts after experiencing a haunting.