Quiet blooms over stone.

Damfool Grave Flower Elixir de Parfum

$185.00
New
Size: 30mL
.

You stand at the edge of a small hill, where the lake has pulled back and the past rises again in cracked earth and rough wildflowers.

Citrus peels cut through the cool air first—litsea, lime, yuzu—like paper catching flame against the gray of weathered stone. Then the mood settles: chrysanthemum and juniper feel like armfuls of field flowers laid down with care, edged by a subtle mineral hum from plicatone that recalls wet soil and river rock.

Patchouli and fir deepen the scene as time passes, earthy and resinous, with a soft ambergris glow that suggests fog lifting over water rather than heavy smoke. .

Top: Litsea, Lime, Yuzu
Middle: Chrysanthemum, Juniper, Plicatone
Base: Patchouli, Fir, Ambergris

Note: Damfool samples are approximately 1mL in partially-filled vials.

The Brand

Damfool Perfume, builds it's world the way a game designer builds a cast: each creation is written as its own NPC, with a backstory, role, and emotional script rather than as a generic “main character.” His work isn’t about a single signature; it’s about a whole ensemble of quiet protagonists—altar-keepers, aunties, street-stall ghosts, migrating cousins—each bottle behaving like a side character you meet in a different scene of the same universe.

When you move through the Damfool line, you’re not choosing status or center stage so much as deciding which NPC you want walking beside you that day, carrying their habits, memories, and stories into your story.

Damfool is artisanal house, keeping as much work as possible at his own bench rather than outsourcing formula building. Instead of leaning only on ready-made bases, he spends time crafting components and tinctures himself, especially from harder-to-find or specific raw materials that carry real texture and history. That slow, hands-on approach means each idea is built from the ground up: unusual extractions, rare ingredients, and temple-adjacent materials turned into liquids that feel lived-in rather than generic.