Mediterra The World In Scents
At a glance
Is Mediterra The World In Scents worth trying?
Mediterra by The World In Scents is a fragrance for women and men.
- Best match
- Casual wear in Summer
- Performance feel
- Good longevity with Moderate sillage
- Signature profile
- citrus, woody, aromatic with Yuzu, Bitter Orange, Neroli
The first impression
Mediterra by The World In Scents is a fragrance for women and men. Mediterra was launched in 2018. The nose behind this fragrance is Mark St Marie. Top notes are Yuzu, Bitter Orange, Neroli, Apple and Peach; middle notes are Woody Notes, Iris, Mastic or Lentisque, Olive, Cognac and Immortelle; base notes are Woody Notes, Seaweed and Musk.
What shapes the scent
The perfumer behind it
Mark St Marie
Mark St Marie is a perfumer behind The World In Scents, a brand offering fragrances like Gravity Plus, Grey Stone Castle, and Mediterra. His compositions often blend fresh, aquatic, and woody accords with a contemporary edge. St Marie's work is recognized for its accessibility and modern appeal.
Notes pyramid
The mood it creates
The Alchemist Archetype: Portrait of Mediterra The World In Scents
Essence
Mediterra channels the Alchemist archetype, a fragrance for those who transform the ordinary into gold. Its opening of yuzu and peach suggests a playful experimenter, while the mastic and seaweed heart reveals someone who finds magic in unlikely combinations. The musk base grounds their ephemeral creations in sensual reality.
This is a scent for boundary-crossers-those who see no divide between art and science, between kitchen and laboratory. The Alchemist doesn't just make perfume; they conjure liquid memories, much like how Mediterra evokes sun-warmed stone and salt-crusted linen with its marine accords.
Style & Aesthetic
They wear linen smocks splattered with dye, their pockets full of beach glass and odd-shaped keys. Mediterra would live among their apothecary bottles, its citrusy brightness peeking out between vials of homemade tinctures. Their aesthetic is organized chaos-a Persian rug under a steel worktable, fresh figs in a copper bowl.
Their home is part studio, part greenhouse. The fragrance's olive note would blend with the scent of their terrace herb garden, where they infuse vodka with homegrown lemongrass.
Philosophy & Values
They believe everything contains latent potential-the yuzu's zest, the immortelle's golden resin. The seaweed's brininess reflects their conviction that beauty often hides in "unlovely" places. They value process over product, though their shelves are lined with exquisite byproducts of curiosity.
For them, failure is just data. The cognac note suggests they appreciate aged wisdom, but the apple's freshness keeps them perpetually open to new approaches. Their motto might be: "Observe, transform, repeat."
Relationships
They attract fellow creators-potters, poets, molecular gastronomists. Romantic partners describe them as "endlessly surprising"-the peach's sweetness balanced by the musk's animalic depth. They're the friend who gifts handmade sea salt scrubs or starts impromptu jam-making sessions.
Their collaborations are legendary. The iris note hints at their talent for drawing out others' hidden talents, like a catalyst in a chemical reaction. Yet they need solitude too-the woody notes speak of late nights at the workbench, solving problems only they can see.
Lifestyle
Their days follow inspiration, not clocks. Mediterra might be spritzed before testing a new fermentation recipe or sketching an idea for a kinetic sculpture. They take "coffee breaks" to identify wild edibles or practice glassblowing techniques from YouTube tutorials.
They document obsessively-watercolor journals of tide pool findings, spreadsheets tracking lunar phases and bread rise times. The fragrance's marine quality recalls their habit of collecting seawater for electrolysis experiments.
Shadow
Their curiosity can become distraction-the yuzu's brightness flitting from project to project without completion. The musk's sensuality may manifest as indulgence when unbalanced, their discipline dissolving like salt in water. They risk becoming a dilettante, their alchemy reduced to parlor tricks.
When stuck, the olive's bitterness emerges-frustration at ideas that won't coalesce. The shadow Alchemist forgets that even gold must cool in the crucible.
Conclusion
Mediterra is liquid potential-a fragrance for those who see the world as raw material waiting to be reimagined. It captures the Alchemist's essence: the citrus of new ideas, the seaweed of unexpected sources, the musk of tangible results. To wear it is to carry a reminder that transformation is always possible, if one knows how to look.