History of the house
Slumberhouse was founded in 2008 in Portland (Oregon, United States) by Josh Lobb. The project emerged from a circle of artists and creatives based in the Pacific Northwest, initially conceived as a loose collective in which Josh Lobb handled the fragrance side while collaborators worked on visual art, clothing and music. Bottles were sold one at a time on Etsy in the early years, and the brand consolidated under its own name and website as the catalogue grew (Fragrantica designer page, Parfumo brand page, accessed 2026-05-23).
Josh Lobb is a self-taught perfumer. He did not study at ISIPCA in Versailles (France), at the Grasse Institute of Perfumery in Grasse (France) or in-house at a major fragrance composition company. His training was self-directed, built through years of experimentation with raw materials. He has rarely given long interviews, with notable exceptions on Basenotes in 2010 and a sample-set conversation with CaFleureBon in 2014, where he discussed his sourcing and his approach to dense extrait-strength formulas (Basenotes interview archive, CaFleureBon Slumberhouse sample set article, accessed 2026-05-23).
The first widely distributed compositions were Jeke, a cade and tobacco smoky structure, and Vikt, both dated 2008-2009 in the Fragrantica and Parfumo databases. A second wave in 2011 and 2012 anchored the house in the reference catalogue of niche perfumery commentary: Norne, Sova, Pear + Olive, Baque and Rume all arrived within an eighteen-month period and were quickly picked up by independent fragrance critics such as Persolaise in London (United Kingdom), CaFleureBon in New York (United States) and the Kafkaesque blog (Persolaise review of Jeke, Sova, Ore and Norne, 2014; CaFleureBon Slumberhouse extrait coverage, 2013).
The house operated in a deliberately confidential register throughout the 2010s. Distribution stayed direct, with no boutique network and no group ownership. Stock cycles were brief, and several reformulations appeared under the same names with adjusted concentrations, which the house itself communicated minimally. Two new releases in the mid-2010s, Kiste in 2015 and New Sibet in 2016, extended the catalogue without altering the production model.
Public communication paused in the late 2010s and the website went quiet for an extended period. The house resumed activity with Mond in 2021, followed by reformulations and occasional new compositions through the 2020s. Fjerne, presented as the first new scent in two years at the time of its launch, sold through in roughly twenty-four hours before the shop closed again, a pattern that has structured the brand's relationship with its audience for over a decade (Fragrantica news coverage of Fjerne, accessed 2026-05-23).
Olfactive signature
Slumberhouse practices raw natural concentration perfumery, built on dense formulas dosed at extrait strength, with a heavy reliance on resins, conifers, tobacco, honey, hay and dark amber materials. Compositions are not constructed for projection at low dilution; they read like saturated material studies, with little of the powdered transparency typical of mainstream eau de parfum work. The house's identity rests on this saturation rather than on a single recurring accord (Persolaise reviews 2014, Kafkaesque reviews 2013, CaFleureBon coverage).
Three stylistic axes recur in the catalogue. The first is the dark resinous conifer axis, anchored by Norne (2012) and its fir, spruce and incense reading, described by critics as one of the most realistic coniferous accords in commercial perfumery. The second is the smoky cade and tobacco axis, set by Jeke (2008) and extended in honeyed register by Sova (2012). The third is the unconventional pairing axis, the most editorially discussed of the three, illustrated by Pear + Olive (2012), where ripe pear meets a green olive oil character that early reviews described as strange, divisive and unmistakable.
The artisanal solo production is a defining trait. Compositions are blended and bottled in Portland under Josh Lobb's direct responsibility, with no industrial outsourcing publicly documented. Batch sizes are small, release windows are short, and the house has built a reputation for selling out within hours of opening its shop, sometimes within minutes. This rhythm pushes the secondary market and the decant resellers, with Slumberhouse bottles routinely changing hands above retail in the United States and across Europe.
A solo American niche house built on raw natural concentration, brief release windows and a catalogue that reads like a series of saturated material studies.
Key characteristics
Notable perfumes
The Slumberhouse catalogue brings together roughly a dozen compositions signed by Josh Lobb since 2008. The following releases are independently documented on Fragrantica, Parfumo and Basenotes, with consistent attribution and launch year across the three sources.
| Year | Perfume | Perfumer | Olfactive family |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2008 | Jeke | Josh Lobb | Smoky woody cade tobacco |
| 2009 | Vikt | Josh Lobb | Resinous woody balsamic |
| 2009 | Ore | Josh Lobb | Gourmand cocoa resinous |
| 2011 | Rume | Josh Lobb | Aromatic green woody |
| 2012 | Norne | Josh Lobb | Woody aromatic coniferous |
| 2012 | Sova | Josh Lobb | Oriental honeyed hay |
| 2012 | Pear + Olive | Josh Lobb | Fruity green unconventional |
| 2012 | Baque | Josh Lobb | Smoky aromatic woody |
| 2015 | Kiste | Josh Lobb | Gourmand tobacco peach |
| 2016 | New Sibet | Josh Lobb | Animalic civet floral |
| 2021 | Mond | Josh Lobb | Resinous balsamic dark |
Norne (2012) is the most widely cited composition of the house: a coniferous resinous reading built around fir, spruce and incense, often described in critical reviews as one of the most convincing forest accords in modern niche perfumery. Jeke (2008) set the smoky cade tobacco template that anchored the brand in its first years, with autumnal wood-smoke and leather inflections highlighted by Kafkaesque in 2013. Pear + Olive (2012) remains the most editorially discussed for its unconventional fruit-green pairing, sweet pear against green olive oil. Sova (2012) reads as a denser honeyed extension of the Jeke structure, and Mond (2021) marked the public return of the house after several years of silence.
The house today
Slumberhouse remains active in 2026, in the same intermittent register it has cultivated since the early 2010s. Distribution is unchanged: the brand sells exclusively through its own website, with no multi-brand retail network, no boutique partnership and no group ownership publicly documented. Production stays in Portland (Oregon, United States), in a solo studio model held by Josh Lobb.
Recent activity centers on reformulations of the historical catalogue, alongside occasional new compositions in the 2020s. The release pattern remains compressed: shop windows open for short periods, stock sells through in hours, and the site returns to closed status until the next batch. The house communicates minimally outside these windows, and Josh Lobb has not, to public knowledge, given an extended press interview since the mid-2010s.
The brand sits in a singular position in American niche perfumery: an independent solo house with no investor, no advertising, no retail presence, and a documented willingness to disappear for long stretches. That posture has made Slumberhouse a reference for a broader generation of independent American projects, several of which have cited the brand as a formative influence in their decision to refuse traditional distribution. The bottles routinely command a sustained premium on the secondary market, with Norne, Pear + Olive and the earliest Jeke batches among the most actively traded references.
Frequently asked questions
Sources
- Slumberhouse: official website (accessed 23 May 2026)
- Fragrantica: Slumberhouse designer page (accessed 23 May 2026)
- Parfumo: Slumberhouse brand page and catalogue (accessed 23 May 2026)
- Fragrantica: Josh Lobb perfumer profile (accessed 23 May 2026)
- Persolaise: review of Jeke, Sova, Ore and Norne (February 2014)
- CaFleureBon: Slumberhouse extraits review and sample set (2013)
- Kafkaesque: Slumberhouse Jeke smoky autumn review (June 2013)
- Luckyscent: Josh Lobb perfumer directory (accessed 23 May 2026)