The Original Voodoo Queen of New Orleans
Marie Laveau was one of the most famous voodoo queens of New Orleans. She was born a free woman of color in the early 1800s and made a name for herself as a hairdresser to wealthy white aristocrats. Using the information she gleaned from client gossip and a robust network of "spies," she was able to become top priestess in a city overrun with them. Besides offering spells and potions, she was also a humanitarian and regularly cared for the sick as well as those condemned to the gallows.
This perfume smells like a cross between a love potion and a curse.
Learn more about Marie Laveau on Storical Podcast.
This perfume was formerly known as Voodoo Queen.
Ingredients (IFRA allergens noted): Jojoba oil, Parfum, Benzyl benzoate, Lilial, Cinnamaldehyde, Citral, Coumarin, Eugenol, Farnesol, Geraniol, Alpha-Hexylcinnamaldehyde, D-Limonene, Linalool, Methyl 2-octynoate, Isoeugenol, Alpha-Amylcinnamic aldehyde, Cinnamyl alcohol, DL-Citronellol, Hydroxycitronellal, Hydroxyisohexyl 3-cyclohexene carboxaldehyde, Cinnamic aldehyde (Cinnamal)
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