Three black bottles in a box

The Otts & Kulcha Fragrance Trio

By Sam Martin

Scent is its own form of architecture — not a structure you see, but one you feel. The Atmosphere Collection was built around that idea: three fragrances designed as environments, each one shaping a different emotional and spatial temperature. They’re not meant to be perfumes for the body; they’re atmospheres for the room, companions to light, texture, and comfort.

Here’s a closer look at the trilogy:

Market

Warm woods, grounded herbs, quiet clarity

Market is the anchor of the collection — a clean, warm, sandalwood-forward atmosphere with sage running through it like a cool current. It’s the scent of early light, open windows, a space being reset for the day. There’s a soft hum to it: calm, warm, gently resinous, familiar without being predictable.

Market is the fragrance that makes a room feel composed again. It’s the one people burn when they need order, or peace, or simply a reset that doesn’t announce itself. Think of it as a grounding ritual in scent form.

Cleared

Amber, bitter orange, lifted breath

Cleared is the exhale — the moment after the match goes out. A streak of amber mellows bitter Neroli notes, creating a contrast that clears the room without scrubbing it. There’s a meditative quality to this one: airy, clean-edged, but still warm enough to feel human.

It’s the scent you reach for before guests arrive. It’s not sharp; it’s simply clarifying.

Night Market

Leather, smoke, low light

Night Market is the deep end of the trio — moody, resinous, atmospheric. The top carries the herbaceous qualities of Market, but the real movement comes from the darker edges: soft smoke, worn leather, the kind of warmth that gathers in corners.

This is your after-hours fragrance. Dinner aftermath. Lamps down low. It doesn’t intrude; it vibes. Night Market is the room at its most cinematic.

Three Moods, One Story

Together, Market, Cleared, and Night Market create a daily arc — morning, afternoon, night — but they aren’t bound to a schedule. They’re tools for shaping atmosphere, textured interpretations of light and time.

Use them as you’d use color or sound: intentionally, instinctively, without rules.