Malìa is dedicated to a vice that can also be considered a virtue: the art of knowing how to seduce. It is the story of a rebellious woman who was about to be burned at the stake because, during the Holy Inquisition, she had been labeled as a witch. But maybe it was just too intelligent and too beautiful for those times. The only person who shows a little pity for this extraordinary woman is his executioner who offers her a narcotic potion to make her lose knowledge and not make her feel pain, an intoxicating potion like her eyes.
A fragrance that witch your mind, a fragrance that seduces (malia: to enchant). But the Malìe were also the cantilene that anticipated the arrival of the witches of Benevento, the meeting place of the Italian witches. By singing their malies under walnut trees, these beautiful women made men lose their heads.
A hypnotizing fragrance that opens with an explosion of Osmathus and completely envelops those who smell it that is initially rejected, almost frightened, but then cannot help but smell it again, and again ... captured by the aphrodisiac properties of this flower.