Marissa Zappas makes perfume that smells like tornadoes and birthday cake
Marissa Zappas has a radical imagination. Here, the perfumer talks with Jocelyn Silver about the new direction for her namesake brand

Independent New York-based perfumer Marissa Zappas is known for her romantic, esoteric fragrances, made to evoke Technicolour films and beguiling historical figures. She is also interested in capturing the scent of natural phenomena, such as petrichor and damp earth, alongside the brazenly artificial: the rubbery smell of balloons, or an orange-flavoured Ring Pop. ‘My taste,’ she says over the phone while on a business trip to Paris, ‘is inherently nostalgic.’
Zappas began working in fragrance in 2015 while studying anthropology and cemetery construction, though says that she has ‘always been very, very sensitive to smell.’ She started her namesake brand in 2021, specialising in perfume that draws from hyper-specific points of reference. Some include ‘Maggie the Cat is Alive! I’m Alive!’, a tribute to Elizabeth Taylor, with notes of peach, orris, champagne and ‘sunlight’; or the gourmand ‘Annabel’s Birthday Cake’, a creamy, sophisticated take on a Proustian childhood memory, with heliotrope, lemon sugar, ‘tuberose frosting’, and roasted tonka bean.
Perfumes by Marissa Zappas
Marissa Zappas perfumes are radically imaginative
Each unique scent used to come in a variety of bottles, and with different branding and packaging. But now, Zappas has, in her own words, ‘levelled up’ with a recent refresh, stocking her fragrances in newly designed uniform bottles for a more cohesive feel. ‘There are intense differentiations between each of my fragrances because, in a way, they’re each in their own world,’ says Zappas. ‘So I wanted to maintain that differentiation, but also wanted my bottles to be recognisably from my brand’.
Reminiscent of vintage glassware, they now feature ribbed surfaces, and spherical brass-coloured tops, finished with dainty black bows. Zappas worked with artist and designer Gordon Landenberger on the concept, which nods to the late French perfumer Annick Goutal. Each bears a label with an illustration courtesy of artist and writer Anna Bane, or illustrator Cadence Sisco. There’s a Harlequin clown with a pink frosted cake for ‘Annabel’s Birthday Cake’; a feudal hay cart for ‘Violette Hay’, which evokes ‘the memory of a playful afternoon on a farm’, picking apricots and violets; and a woman peeking through curtains for ‘La Divina’ which contains rose, cassis, poplar bud, and sandalwood, and is named in tribute to the first famous Roman courtesan Imperia La Divina.
Perfumes by Marissa Zappas
‘We worked so hard on [the illustrations] for each fragrance. They’re very whimsical, whilst being shockingly beautiful,’ says Zappas. The entire rebrand is tied together with Zappas’ ‘Cleopatra-like’, Art Deco-inspired logo, featuring her initials above a spiralled ribbon. ‘It was only after, I would say, four years of selling perfume that I was able to afford [to make] a bottle that I truly loved,’ says Zappas.
Despite the recent changes, Zappas dedcided to reformulate just one of her current fragrances, ‘Lilac Dream’, which is now called ‘Dream Sequence’. Zappas and her assistant, actress Ruby McCollister (who also collaborated with her on the perfume oil ‘Tragedy’) share a love for Fred Zinnemann’s 1955 adaptation of Oklahoma!, especially its wistful and eerie dream sequence. ‘We realised how important [that scene] was for us both,’ Zappas explains. ‘I was also thinking about tornadoes at the time. And so ‘Dream Sequence’ is the original ‘Lilac Dream’ mashed with some inspiration from that scene. There’s this idea of dirt swirling around a little, but it’s not that heavy. There is something just a little bit edgier going on now if that makes sense.’ The scent in its new iteration is described as ‘a tornado of lilacs, a swirling rush of greenery, earth and purple petals, painting the dark technicolour of an August sky.’
‘One of the main reasons why I love perfume so much – and why I love creating perfume so much – is that a fragrance can be inspired by literally anything,’ says Zappas. ‘I just love when my clients give me their sources of inspiration and it’s a 30-second clip from a movie, or a rare colour or a visual of their mother's shoe from 1958. And then to take all of these random sources of inspiration or ideas and turn them into [olfactory experiences] is mind-blowing. It's an honour to do this work and to be able to create in the way that I am.’
Wallpaper* Newsletter
Receive our daily digest of inspiration, escapism and design stories from around the world direct to your inbox.
Jocelyn Silver is a writer based in Los Angeles, covering fashion, beauty, the arts, and cultural ephemera. Her work regularly appears in titles like Vogue and W, and she has contributed to and worked at outlets ranging from newspapers like the Wall Street Journal to magazines like CR Fashion Book. She really loves perfume.
-
Morgan announces nine limited editions of its Super 3 three-wheeler
The Super 3 Origins Collection assembles nine elaborate design specifications for the diminutive Morgan Super 3, drawing on the influences and inspirations that shaped this high-performance three-wheeler
By Jonathan Bell Published
-
Vipp’s new guesthouse in Latvia’s Salaca National Park is its cosiest to date
Danish design brand Vipp transforms a 19th-century Latvian riverside log cabin into its ninth guesthouse
By Sofia de la Cruz Published
-
Step inside Le Harlequin, an imaginative redesign of a Mumbai apartment
Le Harlequin by Design Hex is an imaginative redesign of a Mumbai apartment in the bustling Indian city's Lower Parel neighbourhood
By Daven Wu Published
-
Andrés Reisinger makes Hourglass blush with bubblegum-pink drapes
Artist Andrés Reisinger speaks exclusively to Wallpaper* about his New York takeover with Hourglass cosmetics
By India Birgitta Jarvis Published
-
Hermès heads to New York for a one-off show capturing ‘the pace, energy and optimism’ of the city
Yesterday evening (7 June 2024) at New York’s Pier 36, Nadège Vanhee held ‘The Second Chapter’ of her A/W 2024 Hermès womenswear show with an energetic, colour-saturated collection inspired by her former home city
By Jack Moss Published
-
Inside Cutler and Gross’ ‘warm and inviting’ New York address
As Cutler and Gross upsize to a new store on New York’s Mercer Street, we speak to designers Chris Leong and Dominic Leong of New York-based architecture firm Leong Leong about the space, which was inspired by ’archival libraries and reading rooms’
By Tianna Williams Published
-
Remembering Liquid Sky, the cult 1990s New York fashion store that was ‘also a scene’
As a new book is released, Liquid Sky founders Claudia Rey and Carlos Slinger tell Wallpaper’s Mary Cleary about the downtown fashion store that attracted New York’s underground and had Chloë Sevigny as a sales clerk
By Mary Cleary Published
-
Met Gala 2024 and ‘Sleeping Beauties’ exhibition: what to expect
Everything Wallpaper* knows about the Met Gala 2024 this evening (6 May 2024) – from the theme, exhibition and dress code to the A-list co-chairs
By Jack Moss Last updated
-
Inside John Lobb’s timelessly elegant New York flagship, a trove for shoe lovers
John Lobb opens its 700 Madison Avenue store, a walnut wood-clad space filled with sophisticated footwear for any occasion or terrain
By Tianna Williams Published
-
Comme Si’s first store in Brooklyn is a design lover’s temple to socks
Sock and loungewear brand Comme Si launches a temporary Brooklyn store, a rich and inviting space created with designers Elias Studio, John Sohn and Yoonjee Kwak
By Pei-Ru Keh Published
-
Inside Valentino’s vast new store on New York’s Madison Avenue
The three-floor Valentino boutique, which was formerly a longstanding flagship space for Calvin Klein, has been transformed into a beacon of Italian style
By Pei-Ru Keh Published