Nos Republic Tansu Silk AI collage by Nicoleta
“The Gods of heaven are irrational. So I may die and never meet you, whom I love so much.” *
In Japan, the tansu (箪笥) is a wooden chest used to store things considered too precious for everyday life: silk kimonos, books, letters, family heirlooms, objects entrusted to the next generation. What makes the tansu so fascinating is its dual nature. It is, on the surface, a practical object, born from the needs of everyday life in traditional Japanese homes, and it beloned to a way of living where rooms were fluid, space was rearranged according to need, and precious things had to be folded, protected, hidden, moved, preserved. Silk kimonos, passed from mother to daughters, folded away between layers of paper. Books inherited, holding letters between the pages. Old katana blades, documents, keepsakes, small proofs of continuity, all the fragile inventory of a family’s private mythology.
Each tansu becomes, over time, a material witness to a family’s history, slowly absorbing the traces of the lives that pass through it.The wood has traces of the scent of everything entrusted to it: incense burned to protect delicate fabrics, paper slowly aging in the dark, silk, dust, seasons, human presence reduced to its most intimate trace. Open a tansu you inhale a folded memory of a life, and sometimes of many lives before it.
Tansu boxes and silk patterns, collage by Nicoleta, fairuse images
“Are my thoughts revealed to others? I dreamed my jeweled comb box was open to the light.”*
My game of associations leaves Japan and travel across Europe, to the eastern part, to the foothills of the Carpathian Mountains. There – and I mean, here – in Eastern Europe, you will find another chest waiting just as heavy with meaning: the Romanian ladă de zestre, the dowry chest. Polish women had their skrzynia wiana. Russian girls filled their stenka, a hybrid between a wardrobe, a cupboard and a wall cabinet, where the precious things were safekept. Different names, different woods, different painted flowers, in different patterns and various colors, but all belonging to the same old rites of passage.
In village life, the dowry chest stood at the threshold between two identities: between the girl who belonged to her parents’ house and the woman who would cross, ritually and socially, into another. Over the years, she filled it slowly and ceremonially, with the proofs of that future self: handwoven towels used in wedding rites and placed around icons, embroidered blouses, sheets and cushion covers worked in the patterns of her village and family, linen touched by the patient hands of women before her, sometimes a small icon, sometimes coins, sometimes a few pieces of jewelry. To open such a chest was to open a compressed cosmology of domestic life. Thread, cloth, wood, scent, prayer, labour, inheritance. A private archive of women’s hands. A folded map of belonging. The dowry chest held what a young woman would carry into marriage, but also what she was expected to become once she crossed that invisible line. Like all true ritual objects, it was practical on the surface and metaphysical underneath.
Dowry chest collage by Nicoleta, fairuse
The tansu and the dowry chest also share a philosophy of time, and with it, a scented universe of preservation. Both were sealed against disappearance with what each culture had at hand. In Japan, precious incense materials, sandalwood, agarwood, fragrant wood shavings, could be placed between layers of silk, scenting the fabric while protecting it from insects and dampness. In the villages of Eastern Europe, protection was more herbal, more bitter, more rooted in the garden and the field, in the old understanding that plants could cleanse, guard, bless, and keep harm at a distance. Dried mint, basil, lavender, chamomile, thyme, sometimes sprigs of pelin, wormwood, were tucked among linen, towels, embroidered blouses and bridal cloth.
Creative Director Ksenia Golovanova photo via the brand
Ksenia Golovanova, creative director shared with us how Nos Republic Tansu Silk was conceived: “The first time I travelled to Kyoto, the seat of Japanese traditional crafts, I, out of interest for all things made of wood, booked an appointment with the owner of an old studio, a fourth-generation artisan specializing in tansu cabinetry — their repair, conservation etc. It was October, the appointment was scheduled for 6pm, the sun was beginning to set, giving everything around — the trees, the clay roofing on shrines and townhouses, the mackerel-striped cat guarding the door — a rich, warm, peachy-gold patina. There was the heady scent of blooming osmanthus floating in the air. Everything was so perfect, it almost felt ridiculous — a flawless memory shaping up before my eyes. Once inside, it went on: the scent of osmanthus was merging into the woody smell of the room where tansu chests were restored. And then, the glorious moment came when the studio owner opened the drawer of an old tansu from the 1840s, and all this beautiful air — almost like an exhale — rushed out: warm sandalwood; the musky, slightly musty scent of vintage kimonos still being stored there, layered with rice paper; the herbal freshness of incense keeping out the insects and the off-smells. Such a beautiful scent of memories, of lives well lived, of precious things kept safe — this was the instant when Tansu Silk came together for me as a perfume.”
Perfumer Maria Golovina, photo via the brand
“The choice of nose for Tansu Silk, for me, was easy and natural — it had to be the perfumer Maria Golovina, one of my best friends, an owner of her own perfume brand HOLYNOSE. I knew that the perfume, though based on the universal idea of preserving things and memories, had to be very respectful of Japanese culture, as it was an ancient Japanese craft that we chose as a storytelling frame. Maria, having done her good share of Japanese studies and speaking the language well, is both knowledgeable and reverent of that frame. I also knew Maria is really, really good with natural sandalwood, a raw material central for Tansu, — so good, in fact, that we ended up using almost 10% of natural sandalwood in the formula (that, together with other naturals like ambrette absolute and other, brought its cost up to 1500eur per kilo). She’s a lover and connoisseur of vintage fragrances, which, for me, was also a plus — I wanted Tansu to have a bit of a retro feel to it, a texture of memories, some smile lines left by time. I think Maria achieved that effect beautifully: this perfume never feels ‘old’, but it feels — rich with experience? Carrying a lot inside? Smell it and tell me.”
Nos Republic Tansu Silk AI Nicoleta
The scent these chests exhale upon opening, the warmth of precious textiles kept fresh by incense, is at the core of Tansu Silk, a woody musky perfume imbued with the golden patina of the past. But this is no dusty archive, and do not imagine you are about to open some Pandora’s box of long-buried ghosts. What Maria Golovina opens here is gentler and far stranger: a vessel of preserved presence, strangely alive, almost unnerving in its vulnerability and realism. Tansu Silk earns its own space in the genre of memory perfumes because it refuses the predictable dance of nostalgia. Instead, it feels personal in a far more complicated way, carrying all the emotional sediment of a life, the beautiful and the difficult, the tender and the… unresolved. Once the lid is lifted, you find a living creature: familiar and unrecognizable at once, like a distorted mirror in which all your past selves briefly gather into one shape. And for a moment, you are not entirely sure whether you want to hold it, or mourn the possibilities that never happened. It begins ceremonially, with cold incense and iris, almost camphoraceous in their blue clarity, as if the lid had just been lifted and the first thing you smell is the coolness of the dark. Pink pepper flickers next, dry and silvery, like touching cold metal hinges with your fingertips (and having the cold smell imprinted on your fingers).Then hinoki arrives and smooths things out with its clean, lemony, resinous air, part temple beam, part wooden ceremonial dagger. Even deeper, under the undergrowth of the hinoki forest, the orris grows more powdery, all frosted smile, deep roots, and aristocratic distance. Ambrette then brings in its peculiar vegetal muskiness, witchy, seeded, softly animalic, bringing a familiar pagan-folk pulse under the immaculate stiff-upper-lipped polish.
Nos Republic Tansu Silk brand image
And after this severe and buttoned-up opening, the perfume begins to bloom. Sandalwood rises in all its glory, creamy, deep, polished, warm. Osmanthus opens beside it in its most apricot-lacquered register: fruity but shadowed, golden but oh so fuzzy-sueded- and tactile, so vivid I can almost taste the stone of the fruit in my mouth. What was once cold blue becomes the warmth of peachy soft lights. The silk robe is no longer folded away in darkness, but inhabited: shoulders, wrists, arms moving through air, fabric dancing with each movement, cold upon the skin, getting warmer as it’s lived in. And somewhere in this reversal, Tansu Silk begins to dial time backwards, to a soft, luminous, youthful, cozy-as-a-button, and deeply feminine mood – in all its carefree movement.
After the blooming effusion slowly dials down, Tansu Silk settles into a low-frequency woody-zen hum, all hinoki, sandalwood, musk, and gold dust suspended in the air. It has slowly become my go-to perfume for my evening ritual, when the day is finally done, all my unnecessarily complicated skincare steps are complete, hair braided, silk pillow cold, hot tea in my cup. There is something deeply feminine about wearing it then, but very far from my usual feel-good self-care perfumes. It feels more like an encounter with an internal ideal, a composed, softened, better-aligned version of myself that all the women before me might approve of. And trust me, coming from Eastern Europe, even the thought of receiving approval from your ancestral female line, that domestic Bene Gesserit of mothers, grandmothers, and great-aunts silently (yet lovingly) judging everything from your posture and state of your soul- is not a small achievement!
*Poem- Ōtomo no Sakanoue no Iratsume (poem, 8th century)
Top Notes: Blooming osmanthus, camphor incense, pink pepper, hinoki cypress, orris, ambrette, vintage musks, sandalwood
Nicoleta Tomsa, Senior Editor
Disclosure: Nos Republic Tansu Silk kindly gifted by the brand, as always, opinions are my own.
AI enhanced pack shot of Nos Republic Tansu Silk, Nicoleta
Thanks to the generosity of Nos Republic we have a 50 ml bottle of Tansu Silk for one registered reader from EU, US or UK. You must register or your entry will not count. To be eligible, please leave a comment saying what sparks your interest based on Nicoleta’s review and where you live. Draw closes 6/12/2026
Check out my reviews on Nos Republic Bad Wolf, Moon Child and Cor Serpentis (which is also one of my best scents of 2025) and J’s cinematic take on Empire T
Queer de Russie was an Art and Olfaction winner 2024 Best Newcomer
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