Filippo Sorcinelli Reliqvia extrait de parfum bottle, UNUM collection
© Filippo Sorcinelli

Perfume · Smoky woody incense

Reliqvia

Reliqvia is a fragrance of place: a tribute to the chiesa della Croce in Senigallia, a Baroque oratory of 1608 whose walls are clad in gilded wood. Its incense is described as layered and peated by solemn, sacred years, the material memory of a room that has held prayer for four centuries.
Year · 2021
House · Filippo Sorcinelli
Collection · UNUM
Family · Smoky woody incense

Quick answers

Year and family
2021 · Smoky woody incense, extrait de parfum, UNUM collection.
Olfactory signature
A dense, peated incense layered with precious woods: patchouli, incense and cashmere wood, guaiac and sandalwood, closed by elemi, nutmeg and tobacco leaves.
Perfumer
Filippo Sorcinelli, organist and maker of liturgical vestments, sole author of the house compositions.
House
The sacred-memory fragrance of the UNUM collection. Filippo Sorcinelli.

History

Reliqvia belongs to UNUM, Filippo Sorcinelli's first olfactory line, born in 2013 out of his atelier of sacred vestments. The perfume pays tribute to the chiesa della Croce, the Church of the Cross in Senigallia, an Italian Baroque oratory raised in 1608 by the Confraternity of the Sacrament and the Cross, a brotherhood still active today, of which Sorcinelli is himself a member as organist and artistic director.

The building is a casket of gold and wood: its walls are clad in gilded timber, and it holds a statue of the dead Christ carved from seventeenth-century wood, which tradition unveils only once a year. Above the altar hangs Federico Barocci's altarpiece, the Entombment of Christ, painted in 1582; Barocci designed even its frame, so that painting and setting read as one.

The place is a compact theater of the Baroque: gilded surfaces catch the candlelight, the carved wood absorbs centuries of incense, and every object earns its charge from long liturgical use. Reliqvia translates that architecture into scent, the way a room can carry the memory of everyone who has knelt in it.

Released in 2021 within one of the most uncompromising collections in Italian author perfumery, Reliqvia is no cold, translucent church incense: enthusiasts file it among the dense, earthy smoky-woody incenses, where resin meets tobacco and precious woods. The house speaks of the chiodo, the nail of the Passion, and of an incense layered and peated by solemn, sacred years, a deposit of time on stone and wood.

Harmonic evolution

Filippo Sorcinelli is an organist; he does not conceive his perfumes as a pyramid of volatility but as a score. Reliqvia is therefore stated in three movements, subject, counter-subject and tail, as the house publishes them. The subject sets incense and woods; the counter-subject tempers their gravity; the tail smokes and roots the whole in tobacco.

Subject
Patchoulideep earth
Incensesmoky resin
Cashmere Woodvelvety wood
Guaiac Woodtarry wood
Sandalwoodcreamy wood
Counter-subject
Orange blossomhoneyed floral
Scots pineresinous conifer
Cloveswarm spice
Lentiskgreen resin
Amyrislight wood
Tail
Elemicitrus resin
Sweet Orangesweet citrus
Black Currantgreen fruit
Nutmegwoody spice
Smoke Notesdry smoke
Tobacco Leavescured tobacco

Patchouli and incense open onto a dense, almost mineral ground; cashmere, guaiac and sandalwood thicken it with a precious layer. Orange blossom and the green resins of the counter-subject lighten the gravity without breaking it, while elemi, nutmeg, smoke notes and tobacco leaves close the score on a smoky, lasting warmth, like a deposit of burnt wax.

Olfactory profile

Reliqvia opens on the very matter of incense: a smoky, earthy resin, immediately backed by patchouli. There is no deceptive citrus lift; the sweet orange and black currant of the tail barely surface, just enough to keep the resin from setting. From the first breath you are in the low register, in wood and smoke.

The counter-subject brings the composition's only bright relief. Honeyed orange blossom, Scots pine and lentisk lay down a green, resinous freshness that airs the incense without cooling it, while cloves and amyris hold the warm line. That tension between dense resin and balsamic green gives the perfume its inhabited depth, the depth of a place built of stone and gilded wood.

The tail is the heart of the statement: elemi, nutmeg, smoke notes and tobacco leaves layer the incense and peat it, exactly as the house describes. Cured tobacco signs the memory, the deposit of accumulated years. Longevity is long, the sillage present yet recollected, in keeping with a perfume turned toward what remains rather than what seduces.

“I leave what remains…”Filippo Sorcinelli, on Reliqvia

Key characteristics

Family
Smoky woody incense
Concentration
Extrait de parfum
Signature note
Peated woody incense
Audience
Unisex, recollected sillage

When and where to wear

Reliqvia is a fragrance for cool seasons and solemn hours. Its smoky, woody density blooms in autumn and winter, in the evening more than the day, in moments of recollection. Present without being intrusive, it suits interiors and evenings; in high summer, its resin asks for a light hand.

Usage markers

Temperatures
At its best from 0 to 16 °C.
Time of day
Evening, solemn time, hours of recollection.
Settings
Indoors, reading, concerts, a sacred mood.
Dosage
1 to 2 sprays, recollected sillage.

Seasonal fit

SeasonFitCritical notes
Spring★★★☆On evenings that stay cool.
Summer★★☆☆Dense and smoky; dose it lightly.
Autumn★★★★Its prime season, the woody incense settles in.
Winter★★★★The solemn register reaches full measure.

Context fit

SettingFitUsage recommendation
Recollection★★★★Its primary vocation, a memory worn on the skin.
Indoors★★★★An incense for closed rooms, at home.
Cultural evening★★★★Concert, exhibition: a gravity that accompanies.
Intimate evening★★★☆A smoky warmth, never showy.
Shared office★★☆☆Dense and resinous, dose it with restraint.

Similar perfumes

Smoky woody incense has its neighbors; a few share its resinous gravity or its memory of a sacred place.

PerfumeHouse · yearWhy it is close
LAVSFilippo Sorcinelli · 2014The house's founding incense, in the same UNUM collection; vaster and more aerial than Reliqvia, but the same taste for the sacred.
Basilica di AssisiFilippo Sorcinelli · 2024Another tribute to an Italian place of worship; to set against the peated density of Reliqvia.
AvignonComme des Garçons · 2002A reference for cold, translucent church incense; the exact opposite of Reliqvia's smoky, woody warmth.

Common questions

Who created Reliqvia?01
Filippo Sorcinelli, organist and maker of liturgical vestments, sole author of his house's compositions.
What year did Reliqvia come out?02
In 2021, within the UNUM collection, the house's first olfactory line.
What does the name Reliqvia mean?03
It comes from the Latin relinquo, meaning to leave behind. The relic is the ultimate trace, what remains when everything else has faded.
What does Reliqvia pay tribute to?04
To the chiesa della Croce, the Church of the Cross in Senigallia, a Baroque oratory of 1608, and its altarpiece by Federico Barocci, the Entombment of Christ (1582).
What are the notes in Reliqvia?05
A smoky woody incense: patchouli, incense and precious woods in the subject; orange blossom, pine and green resins in the counter-subject; elemi, nutmeg, smoke notes and tobacco leaves in the tail.
Why harmonic evolution rather than a pyramid?06
Because Filippo Sorcinelli is an organist and structures his perfumes like scores, in subject, counter-subject and tail, rather than top, heart and base.
Is Reliqvia unisex?07
Yes, it is a unisex extrait de parfum with a present yet recollected sillage.
When should you wear Reliqvia?08
Rather in autumn and winter, in the evening or in moments of recollection; in summer, apply it sparingly.

See also

Sources

Written from official Filippo Sorcinelli documents, checked against specialist databases · Author: Sabrina Carlier · Osmetheca · July 14, 2026