Tleyotl Tolteca
At a glance
Is Tleyotl Tolteca worth trying?
Tleyotl by Tolteca is a Oriental Floral fragrance for women.
- Best match
- Evening, Special Occasion wear in Spring, Summer
- Performance feel
- Good longevity with Moderate sillage
- Signature profile
- woody, white floral, warm spicy with Blood Orange, Blood Mandarin, Raspberry Leaf
The first impression
Tleyotl by Tolteca is a Oriental Floral fragrance for women. Tleyotl was launched in 2018. The nose behind this fragrance is Stephanie Bakouche. Top notes are Blood Orange, Blood Mandarin and Raspberry Leaf; middle notes are Jasmine, Neroli, Ylang-Ylang, Tiare Flower and Chili Pepper; base notes are Cedar and Patchouli.
What shapes the scent
The perfumer behind it
Stephanie Bakouche
Stephanie Bakouche is a versatile perfumer whose work spans multiple brands, including Azaleo, Cloon Keen Atelier, Comporta Perfumes, and Fiilit. Her creations range from Bois Bohème and Sun To Soul to Bataille De Fleurs and Saudade - Amazonia. Bakouche's style often explores floral, woody, and aquatic themes with a refined touch.
Notes pyramid
The mood it creates
The Mystic Archetype: Portrait of Tleyotl Tolteca
Essence
The Mystic walks between worlds, and Tleyotl Tolteca is their bridge-a swirl of blood orange and chili pepper over sacred cedar. They are the seer who finds the divine in the sensual, the shaman who knows that ecstasy and austerity are two sides of the same coin. This fragrance is their prayer, their trance, their offering.
They move through life as if half in a dream, attuned to the whispers of jasmine and the crackle of dry patchouli. For them, every scent is an omen, every note a sigil.
Style & Aesthetic
They wear flowing linen and hammered silver, their sleeves catching the wind like wings. Their hair might be braided with fresh flowers or left wild-a deliberate rejection of binary elegance. The scent lingers in their wake, a trail of citrus and spice that marks their passage between realms.
Their home is an altar: candles dripping onto cedar boxes, dried chili garlands, bowls of mandarins left to sweeten in the sun. They curate space as a medium for visions.
Philosophy & Values
They believe in the holiness of contradiction. The chili pepper burns, the ylang-ylang soothes-both are necessary. They seek knowledge that can't be written down, passed instead through touch (the press of a blossom into a palm) or taste (the sting of salt on a wound).
For them, perfume is a sacrament. To wear Tleyotl is to anoint oneself for a journey with no map.
Relationships
They attract pilgrims-those hungry for a glimpse beyond the veil. Lovers are temporary but transformative, leaving fingerprints on their soul like neroli oil on skin. Their closest bonds are with fellow travelers: the weaver who spins moonlight into thread, the cook who salts food with tears.
They teach without preaching, offering a sprig of raspberry leaf or a silence that lasts just long enough to unsettle.
Lifestyle
They rise with the sun to watch light move across the floorboards. Days are spent gathering-herbs, stories, strangers' laughter-and nights distilling these into something potent. They might work as a perfumer, a midwife, or a keeper of forgotten lore.
Spring is their season, when the earth is raw and humming. They thrive in the in-between: dawn, dusk, the moment before a storm.
Shadow
Their fluidity can become rootlessness. Sometimes they forget that even mystics need to eat, to sleep, to stay in one place long enough to be found. They risk floating away entirely, mistaking detachment for wisdom.
Their challenge is to let the cedar anchor them without clipping their wings.
Conclusion
Tleyotl Tolteca is the scent of a hand pulling back a beaded curtain, of smoke curling from a copal offering. It asks us to remember that magic is not escape-it is the act of seeing this world as holy.