Full of awe.

Chronotope Silueta Eau De Parfum

$135.00
Size: 30mL

Pickup available at Stéle NoLita

Usually ready in 2 hours

About
Explore memory and presence in slow, layered moments, where pale blossoms and smooth woods emerge quietly around you.

Each whisper of cacao and sacred florals carries the haunting beauty of landscapes shaped by ancient hands, shifting from sandy solitude to powdery traces that settle in the air. Subtle earthy tones blend with gentle sweetness, hinting at sacred rituals and touched stones, wrapping you in a contemplative veil that feels personal and tender.

Whether you’re seeking solace in stillness, or bringing a sense of reverence to everyday life, Silueta moves gently, unisex and introspective—revealing itself fully to you when you’re open to listening. The experience may feel quietly transformative, both inviting and powerful, never overwhelming, respecting your need for silence and invitation.

Notes: Faint Rose, Southern Magnolia, Tuberose, Hollow Hulls of Wooden Ships, Blood, Red Frangipani Absolute, Gardenia, Chocolate, Jade Cypress Wood, Soil Notes

The Brand

Carter Weeks Maddox, the Founder, Perfumer, and Creative Director of Chronotope, traces his passion for fragrance back to a childhood steeped in scent. Surrounded by family members who wore legendary perfumes and raised amid the wild aromas of Northeast Texas’ Pineywoods—rich red clay, spring wildflowers, smoky barbecue pits, and even the occasional whiff of danger—he developed an early fascination with olfaction. While in college, Maddox began blending inexpensive essential oils as a creative outlet and a form of stress relief, a practice that evolved into experiments with higher-quality materials, synthetics, and eventually a collection of vintage perfumes. Though a trained writer, it was after walking a transformative pilgrimage through Spain that he realized scent, not words, was his truest medium of expression. This became the foundation of Chronotope, an independent perfume house launched in 2020, where Maddox channels personal memory, contradiction, and lived experience into fragrances that occupy what some describe as “their own olfactory universe.” Rejecting the commercialization of mass-produced perfumes, he embraces perfumery’s artistic roots, crafting scents meant not to move units, but to move people—unique, deeply personal, and emotionally resonant works of art in a bottle.