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Kleopatra by Ānti

There are fragrances that seduce, and then there are fragrances that linger like memory.

With Kleopatra, Ānti reimagines one of history’s most mythologized rituals the milk baths of ancient Egypt’s last queen and translates it into a scent that feels both intimate and commanding.

Coming soon as an exclusive launch in the US, Kleopatra arrives at Maxfield as both fragrance and atmosphere.
A study in softness and control.
A modern ritual.
A scent that invites you closer.

LOS ANGELES LIVE TYPEWRITTEN POETRY & PASSED REFRESHMENTS FRIDAY, APRIL 3RD 1PM – 5PM

MALIBU TAROT READINGS & REFRESHMENTS SATURDAY, APRIL 4TH 1PM – 5PM

A Ritual Reimagined

Kleopatra is built around the sensuality of texture. Warm almond milk wraps the skin in a creamy veil, while jasmine blooms quietly beneath the surface. Vanilla and sandalwood extend the experience into something deeper, more enveloping.

The effect is deliberate: a fragrance that stays close to the body, drawing people in rather than projecting outward. A tension between comfort and desire.

Ānti describes it simply:

milk. power. addiction.

The Scent
A gourmand floral, Kleopatra sits firmly in the world of milky fragrances but avoids sweetness for the sake of sophistication.
Top: almond milk, black pepper, cinnamon
Heart: jasmine, musk
Base: vanilla, sandalwood, amber woods
The spice adds a subtle heat. The milk softens everything. The result is creamy, skin-like, and quietly magnetic.
Intimacy as Power
Created by perfumer Emilie Coppermann, the fragrance explores a more nuanced sensuality one that feels personal rather than performative. It is less about presence and more about proximity. A scent that unfolds slowly. That reveals itself over time. That lingers long after someone leaves the room.
The Object
True to Ānti’s language, the bottle reflects restraint and structure: an ambery glass silhouette, a vertical label, and a brushed gold cap. Minimal, architectural, and grounded in the brand’s ongoing exploration of “olfactory archaeology” revisiting the past through a contemporary lens.