New Niche Perfume Review: Sulékó Baba Yaga EDP and EDT + A Primeval Russian Fairy Tale Draw

suleko baba yaga edp edt cecile zarokian cafleurebon

Eau de Toilette; Baba Yaga’s House by Jos A Smith; Eau de Parfum

Last year, Anastasia Sokolow released a set of three fragrances inspired by vintage Russian perfumery that represent winter (*Albho-), spring (Vy Roza), and summer (Djélem) under her brand Sulékó. This year she has introduced her fragrance representing fall, Baba Yaga, in both Eau de Parfum and Eau de Toilette. Once again composed by the excellent perfumer Cécile Zarokian, with unique refillable bottles designed by porcelain artists Joëlle Fevre and Alain Fichot, Baba Yaga is an intriguing addition to the collection.

Suleko Baba Yaga mortar cafleurebon

Baba Yaga by Niroot Puttapipat

One of my storybooks as a child had a story about Baba Yaga, because I remember her house perched on chicken legs. I also remember her having an acute sense of smell, especially for humans, and wanting to eat children who did not serve her well. As with any folkloric character, stories about her are many, but I love the imagery of that nasty old witch in her picturesque, magical home, travelling in her giant mortar and steering with her pestle. I had to admit that I found it an unusual inspiration for perfume, though, because one does not normally associate evil crones with smelling good. Ms. Sokolow’s press material states that it “represents this dark force, which embodies all our fears, everything that can harm us, hold us back and consume us. This dark force can become so powerful that we will have no other choice but to face it; we will have to make a clean break with the past and open for us the way to a better life.”

Suleko baba yaga with bones cafleurebon

Baba Yaga with Bones by Forest Rogers

When I first applied Baba Yaga, the word that came to me was “primeval”.  I could picture a magical wooded place in dark reds and oranges and browns. There is ripe citrus at the top of Baba Yaga, but it is crushed and made rich rather than sparkling by a lot of spice. The perfume has an air of over-ripe foliage, of mulch underfoot, but is not dank or moldy. The scent is complex and wonderful, and unlike anything I have worn. I had the EDT on one arm, and the EDP on the other. The notes for both are the same, but the concentration is different, resulting in the EDT being somewhat brighter and more fruity. The EDT has a shorter life on skin and the drydown is sweetly woody. The EDP retains more complexity and excitement on skin, morphing from spice to woods, with a touch of fruit peeking through. I would consider the EDT appropriate for daily wear, and the EDP is perfect when you want to get serious and start spell-casting.  Just try not to add the kids from next door to the dinner menu.

Notes: Bergamote, orange bigarade, mandarine, pink berries, pepper, elemi, nutmeg, clove, cinnamon, iris, "dry leaves" scent, cedar wood, patchouli, leather, essence of cade

suleko baba Yaga Apocalypse cafleurebon

Baba Yaga Apocalypse by Lawrence Yang

My experience with the Sulékó line has been exciting, as all of the scents are well-made and quite unusual. Ms. Zarokian has composed a set of fragrances under Ms. Sokolow’s direction that really do summon the feel of vintage perfumery, and I hope the line continues to expand.

I received my samples from Ms. Sokolow of Sulékó. Baba Yaga is available on the Sulékó website for 200€ (240€ with VAT) for 50 ml white decorative bottle of Eau de Parfum, and 137.50€ (165€ with VAT) for 50 ml black decorative bottle of EDT.

Tama Blough, Deputy Editor

Ms. Sokolow will be exhibiting the Sulékó line in the Gold section at the Elements Showcase in New York at Skylight West, 500 West 36th Street New York NY 10018, Wednesday, February 5, 2014: 10:00am – 7:00pm and Thursday, February 6, 2014: 10:00am – 5:00pm.Please visit the Elements Showcase website for details.

With gratitude to Ms. Sokolow and Sulékó, we have a draw for 2 ml samples of Baba Yaga in both EDT and EDP for one lucky reader worldwide. Please let us know which folk story or fairy tale you can see translated into perfume, and what intrigues you about this one. Draw ends February 7, 2014.

We announce the winners only on site and on our Facebook page, so Like Cafleurebon and use our RSS option…or your dream prize will be just spilled perfume.

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49 comments

  • I am also intrigued by the idea of a perfume inspired by Baba Yaga. I must say, it sounds amazing! I would like to see the story of Persephone translated into perfume. Thank you for the giveaway!

  • My family is Ukrainian and we would always call my grandma Baba Yaga as a funny knick name. I had no idea it was a actual fairy tale character. .you learn something new everyday.

    As for fairy tale scents. I could see little red riding hood as a scent. Woods!

    I am in the USA

  • Coyote stealing fire. I love the mischievous Native American god and his antics. He saved mankind with his gift of warmth, and he alone knew the trick to coaxing fire from wood. I think this would make a GORGEOUS perfume… if any of the perfume gods are out there listening, make my dream come true!

  • I always thought Baba Yaga just meant witch, didn’t know it was a fairy tale character.
    How about Jack Frost as a perfume. Something wintery and woody perhaps?

  • Well, this sounds amazing! What a fantastic idea, to create a scent about a fairy tale. I love Bab Yaga, and read about her in many books, including Women Who Run With The Wolves.

    I think that the tale of Matty Groves would be good inspiration for a perfume.

  • Courtney Warren says:

    Red Riding Hood (the three bears) would be interesting to make into a perfume. I am in the us.
    Thanks for the draw

  • I’m not familiar with the story of Baba Yaga although there seem to be similarities to the wicked witch in Hansel and Gretal; the perfume sounds wonderful. I’d like to see a perfume about the Sleeping Beauty surrounded by thorny rose hedges and the kingdom all asleep under the witch’s spell. Thanks for the draw and review.

  • In school I had a music teacher who lets us listen to “Baba Yaga”by Mussorgsky, told us the story of the witch in her house on chicken legs and then we had to paint a picture to that story and music. That’s actually the one thing I remember from this music lessons!And already a multisensual experience. The story and music were quite impressing me as a child, so how would a perfume act?
    I could aswell see the little mermaid as an inspiration for perfume.

  • I love folk and fairy tails although Baba Yaga was never a favorite I did like her traveling house. I am always interested in earthy perfumes. The Sprig of Rosemary from East of the Sun and West of the Moon would be interesting translated into a perfume.

  • One of my grandmothers was Ukrainian, so I’ve always had a soft spot for Slavic fairy tales. I would love to smell a perfume interpretation of Finist the Falcon, another Slavic story. Thanks for the drawing! I live in the US.

  • I remember the shudders of delight at the fearful image of Baba Yaga’s chicken-legged house when I heard the stories as a child. I imagine there could be many fairy-tale scents. First to mind was a masculine, lean scent based on the Three Pigs – a cologne capturing the house of straw (hay, grass, powdery pollen) with the house of sticks (woody scents, cedar, incense) and of brick (limestone, slate, cold cathedral scents.)

    I am in the US and would love to win thi sdraw!

  • My choice would be Baba Yaga. I had a friend who used to call herself that, so the connection is still there.
    ty

  • I would love a fragrance based on Scheherazade, love the music and the ballet also.
    Baba Yaga sounds so unusual… I get a sense of the deep forest where she lives.

  • Got introduced to russian fairy tales at around 7/8 yrs of age when my mom bought me a translation in bengali. Still remember the book, a creamy cloth hard bound cover and thick white pages unlike any that i had seen before.

    The stories where out of this world, something i had never read before and there was always the old witch Baba Yagya, in house standing on chicken toes 🙂 someone who provided as the foil for young heroes and heroines.

    Would love to see an adaptation of the Wagner’s Faust, can imagine how the Devil tempting Faust can be enacted through a pyramid of notes…dark and rich fruity tones from a camboodi oud, honey colored amber, with myrhh and frankincense and a oudy smokiness and an underlying note of rich, rich rose…the devil tempting the man 🙂

  • The Emperor and the Nightingale would be my choice since I still have in my mind the picture of the imperial gardens with all the exotic and unique plants and trees where the Nightingale would go and sing for the Emperor in the night. This would be an inspiration for the creation of a smell based on this wonderful tale by Hans Christian Andersen.
    I live in Greece and I thank you for this draw.

  • Having the “Pandora’s Box” story translated into perfume would be interesting.
    Intrigued by, “the EDP is perfect when you want to get serious and start spell-casting” 🙂

  • I knew nothing of the tale of Baba Yaga , but I love it . We truly must face our fears ! I would love to sample this ( and ALL her scents ! )
    I see someone else mentioned Little Red Riding Hood , but that is the first one I thought of as a fairy tale scent .
    The smell of Grandmas house ( good bread and rose talc ), the forest and an animalic base…

  • I can see the Snow White and Evil Queen fairy tale being translated into perfume. They are polar opposites and would make for a intriguing perfume. I like she has combined sweet citrus and spices in this new perfume. I think I would like the edt of Baba Yaga. I like scents you can wear daily without the heavy sillage. In in the US and thanks so much for the draw!

  • julesinrose says:

    What intrigues me is that here’s yet another horribly scary story! I’d heard of Baba Yaga, but didn’t know she had a good sense of smell and liked the taste of children! The scent, however, smells divine!

    I, too, would like a Hansel & Gretel scent. Gingerbread and woods. Mmm!

  • Had me at primeval forest!
    Baba Yaga was one of many fairy tales I loved, but didn’t quite understand. Like a beautiful book of Japanese stories I found in the library, there was a cultural gap not bridged by translation.

    Fairy tale scent…hmmm….maybe Selkie scent.

  • Sounds fascinating! I’m intrigued because I recently tried Enchanted Forest (Russian fairy tale forest) and it didn’t quite work for me but I loved the idea. My first thought is Hansel and Gretal translating into a spicy candy gingerbread perfume.

  • ANYTHING inspired by or pertaining to perfume and myth/folklore, and I am THERE! The other three perfumes sounded great…this one, more than any of the others, has me drooling due to the “forest/dry leaf” accord and that scents based on autumn tend to work best on my skin (spice, smoke, incense, woods).

    More than anything else I would love to see artisan perfumers “do” Sleeping Beauty. Perhaps an Aurora EDP and Briar Rose EDT? *giggles*

    I knew Baba Yaga, originally not from fairy tales or folklore…but from Dungeons and Dragons, where Baba Yaga’s HOUSE was still walking around, sowing mayhem! 🙂

    US resident. Thanks for the draw and the reviews of this intriguing line!

  • I would love to see the Prince and the Pauper translated into a perfume. I’ve never read Baba Yaga so this is new to me. This has peeked my curiousity. Thanks!!!

  • I think The Ugly Duckling would make a fascinating perfume — something that starts out as something rather unpleasant but transforms into something exquisite! (Although, of course, I don’t endorse the whole “ugly duckling” concept or the traditional strictures of beauty…) I remember being quite terrified by Baba Yaga as a child; I’d love to smell how this translates into scent!

  • I am Russian and love perfumes based on characters like Baba Yaga and enchanted forests (Vagabond Prince.) I think it would be cool to make a perfume about Koschei the Deathless, another scary Russian character.

  • Rapunzel would be a great fragrance. Poor girl looking through this tiny tower window into a beautiful garden of colorful flowers and potent herbs that are unreachable. Then to be rescued and discover all that is new.
    Baba Yaga is very intriguing and I would love to give this fragrance a try. Wow. In the USA.

  • I’m wondering if this Baba Yaga is somehow connected to some of the darker Baba characters in Stravinsky’s ‘The Rake’s Progress’ or Menotti’s ‘Medium.’ Or maybe it’s just a popular name??
    I’m not sure if this qualifies as a fairy tale, but Stravinsky’s “Rite of Spring” might make an interesting basis for a perfume.

    In any case, thanks for the draw.

  • There is a twisted tale called “Bearskin”. Pretty much a demon challenges a guy to not bathe, trim his hair, cut his nails, wear the same old cloak for seven years and must sleep in a bearskin. At the end of seven years if he succeeds he will have untold riches and wealth. Gets pretty crazy but you get the picture.
    Baba Yaga has piqued my interest in many ways. Thanks for the draw. United States here.

  • Elizabeth T. says:

    Hurrah for cinnamon! I don’t see enough of it in perfume. I think Hansel and Gretel would make a fun gourmand fragrance. Thank you for the draw! I’m in the USA.

  • I love the twisted, dark aspects of perfumery embodied in Baba Yaga–what a rich set of images and symbols to plumb for fragrant elements.

    I think Rumpelstiltskin would be another interesting perfume with some dark edges to it–the alchemic transmutation of straw (hay and/or milky oat accords) into gold (a rich amber, perhaps, or an apricot/osmanthus/honey), an ancient wooden spinning wheel worn smooth (rosewood or ebony or some such), soft warm clean skin musk for the first born child demanded as payment–and a whiff of molten earth for the chasm that Rumpelstiltskin disappears into after opening a crack in the ground in his final fit of temper at being outwitted.

  • Rumpelstiltskin is a good idea. My first thought was Sleeping Beauty, with the thorny vines surrounding the sleeping castle (perhaps something warm and musky?). Baba Yaga sounds great with its mandarin-and-spice combination, and a woodsy smell that isn’t moldy or mushroomy.

  • I’m looking forward to the ripe citrus at the top.
    It’s gotta be “Beauty and the Beast” translated to perfume. USA

  • i love this thread because it stirred my imagination: what stories evoke what scents? how fun! a little like what the imaginary authors line is doing. anyway, i think Struwwelpeter would be a good subject for a fragrance. the images remind me of dark roots, so i imagine a dark, dark vetiver-based scent!

  • I have been intrigued by this line for a while now.The article was wonderful and I love everything about the inspiration behind the fragrances,the gorgeous bottles and the sound of the scents themselves… The first sort of “tale” or story that came to my mind was “Peter and the Wolf” I can imagine a very unique and dark fragrance.I am in the US.Thank you for the chance.

  • Carole Fallon says:

    I too think Rapunzel would make a great story for a perfume, the witch’s garden, Rapunzel’s beauty and beautiful hair, the hope of a true love.

  • freeestyler says:

    I know Baba YAga since my childhood, it was a very interesting reading. The idea to make perfumes based on such characters is very intriguing. I live in Germany 🙂

  • I live in South Africa and first came upon the baba Yaga through Mussorgsky. I love the intersection between the primeval and ancient horror! My favorite fairytale is the Snow Queen By HC Anderson: it would need an icy and ethereal perfume, touched by roses.

  • Anastasiya Mason says:

    I grew up in Russia and as a child, I was quite scared of Baba Yaga. I love forests in perfumes so I would like to enter in the draw. I also love Christmas scents, that is why The Nutcracker fairy tale would be my choice for a perfume.

  • I love the house on chicken legs! Spooky.

    I’d like to see the Twelve Dancing Princesses made into a perfume. With disco-ball glitter in the bottle! jk.

    I’m in the US, thanks for the draw.

  • I would love to see Angela Carter’s versions of several fairy tales made into perfume. Also, I’d love to see a paired Beauty and the Beast perfume set made to be worn together. I love the description of what’s going on with the citrus in this fragrance, and I’ve always been fascinated by Baba Yaga and her hut with chicken legs. Thanks for the draw!

  • I want a perfume series based on the ideas of stories or on themes that run through fairytales and folk tales. Something dark for morality tales, roses and blood for the sacrifices required for true love… fairy tales will always be my favorite and it is too hard to imagine just one of them transformed into scent. Baba Yaga is interesting because she’s dangerous and grotesque and full of mystery…

    Now my imagination’s been sparked… and I need to study for an exam 🙂 I live in the US.

  • I’m really intrigued by the “essence of cade” in Baba Yaga. As for another fairy tale to transform into a fragrance, The Happy Prince would be a worthy challenge to translate.

  • Fazal Cheema says:

    one fairytale i would love to see be translated into perfume is “Brave” ( i hope modern animated ones count).. The intriguing thing about Baba Yaga is that it’s inspiration is not feel-good character but an evil and mysterious character.. Evil is suddenly cool again 🙂 I am in the US

  • I’ve been fascinated by fairy tales for some time, they are so strange and weird, especially the old ones. Baba Yaga is a great choice for her anti-hero status and symbolic personification of the shadow self. I have a collection of the vintage “colored fairy tale books” (each set of tales was bound in a different colored binding ‘The Blue Fairy Tale Book, The Yellow Fairy Tale Book etc.). These are not your modern tales and are at times quite disturbing to read, death and violence abound along with cannibalism! Odd when you consider they were aimed at children but perhaps not so much when viewed metaphorically, magic as a form of transformation. I think a masculine fragrance based on the story of Blue Beard would be great to smell and I live in the US.

  • I’m intrigued by this simply because I find it such an unexpected choice. This tale brings back memories of my youth. The adults would tell us stories about Baba Yaga taking away misbehaved children. Another tale I might be interested in seeing translated into perfume would be the Little Red Riding Hood. It has great potential. Thanks for the chance!

  • I’m not familiar with the story of Baba Yaga, but the perfume sounds wonderful and dark. I would love a perfume based on the story of Sheherazade, the teller of the 1001 nights stories.

  • I’ve never heard of Baba Yaga but it seems wonderful! I’ve always enjoyed Snow White and think it would make a great scent