Nudiflorum doesn’t need your approval, but will claw it from you no matter how hard you resist. Out of the weird soil of bitter dust and sun lotion, an aldehydic rose rises, gnarled and compelling.
All about this fragrance
Vibe check
This is a close-range fragrance for moments of physical proximity, when the air is quiet and the impression lands in fragments: rose, powder, warm skin, a trace of something dusty and animalic. It suits an understated presence that feels private rather than performative.
How to wear
Best in cool to mild weather, where its powdery floral and leathery facets can unfold without becoming heavy. Apply sparingly: as an extrait, a little goes far, and the scent settles close to the skin with a soft but persistent aura.
Who it’s for
For wearers who like florals with tension: powdery, skin-like, slightly strange and not overtly pretty. It will appeal to those drawn to intimate, textured scents with a sensual edge and a taste for niche compositions that resist easy categorization.
Release year
2018
The nose
Alessandro Gualtieri Alessandro Gualtieri is the Italian perfumer behind Nasomatto, known for building fragrances that feel instinctive, raw and deliberately unconventional. His work often pushes against polished mainstream structure in favor of dense textures, unusual materials and strong emotional contrast. For Nudiflorum, that approach becomes more restrained and tactile: the fragrance is shaped around the idea of bare skin, with a delicate floral core cushioned by earthy, leathery and musky nuances. It shows Gualtieri’s talent for turning an abstract mood into a sharply physical scent.
Collaborators
Alessandro Gualtieri developed the fragrance as founder and perfumer of Nasomatto, shaping both the formula and the concept around his idea of olfactory intimacy and bare-skin tactility.
Nasomatto’s story
Nasomatto treats perfume as an artistic object rather than a conventional luxury accessory. The house is known for concentrated extraits, opaque storytelling and compositions that privilege texture, tension and personal interpretation over easy readability.
Nudiflorum’s concept
Nudiflorum was created during what Gualtieri has described as a later, more reflective phase for Nasomatto, after Baraonda. He framed it as an exercise in intimacy, inspired by the sensation of bare skin, Japanese floral arrangements and incense materials, with the formula gradually softened until its sour leather core became more wearable and delicate.
Extra info
Nudiflorum is presented in Nasomatto’s compact 30ml bottle with a bud-like cap, echoing the fragrance’s floral theme. The name suggests nakedness and bloom, and the scent is often described as one of the house’s more delicate, tactile compositions.
Nudiflorum doesn’t need your approval, but will claw it from you no matter how hard you resist. Out of the weird soil of bitter dust and sun lotion, an aldehydic rose rises, gnarled and compelling.
All about this fragrance
Vibe check
This is a close-range fragrance for moments of physical proximity, when the air is quiet and the impression lands in fragments: rose, powder, warm skin, a trace of something dusty and animalic. It suits an understated presence that feels private rather than performative.
How to wear
Best in cool to mild weather, where its powdery floral and leathery facets can unfold without becoming heavy. Apply sparingly: as an extrait, a little goes far, and the scent settles close to the skin with a soft but persistent aura.
Who it’s for
For wearers who like florals with tension: powdery, skin-like, slightly strange and not overtly pretty. It will appeal to those drawn to intimate, textured scents with a sensual edge and a taste for niche compositions that resist easy categorization.
Release year
2018
The nose
Alessandro Gualtieri Alessandro Gualtieri is the Italian perfumer behind Nasomatto, known for building fragrances that feel instinctive, raw and deliberately unconventional. His work often pushes against polished mainstream structure in favor of dense textures, unusual materials and strong emotional contrast. For Nudiflorum, that approach becomes more restrained and tactile: the fragrance is shaped around the idea of bare skin, with a delicate floral core cushioned by earthy, leathery and musky nuances. It shows Gualtieri’s talent for turning an abstract mood into a sharply physical scent.
Collaborators
Alessandro Gualtieri developed the fragrance as founder and perfumer of Nasomatto, shaping both the formula and the concept around his idea of olfactory intimacy and bare-skin tactility.
Nasomatto’s story
Nasomatto treats perfume as an artistic object rather than a conventional luxury accessory. The house is known for concentrated extraits, opaque storytelling and compositions that privilege texture, tension and personal interpretation over easy readability.
Nudiflorum’s concept
Nudiflorum was created during what Gualtieri has described as a later, more reflective phase for Nasomatto, after Baraonda. He framed it as an exercise in intimacy, inspired by the sensation of bare skin, Japanese floral arrangements and incense materials, with the formula gradually softened until its sour leather core became more wearable and delicate.
Extra info
Nudiflorum is presented in Nasomatto’s compact 30ml bottle with a bud-like cap, echoing the fragrance’s floral theme. The name suggests nakedness and bloom, and the scent is often described as one of the house’s more delicate, tactile compositions.