Incense & Cuir 100 Bon

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2024
Moderate
Sillage
Good
Longevity
Fall
Best Season
Evening
Best For

Fragrance Story

Incense & Cuir by 100 Bon is a fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Incense & Cuir was launched in 2024. The nose behind this fragrance is Amandine Galliano. Top notes are Saffron and Cardamom; middle note is Frankincense; base notes are Patchouli, Dry Wood and Musk.

Composition Profile

warm spicy 100%
metallic 85%
leather 70%
tobacco 60%
woody 50%
amber 40%
earthy 35%
patchouli 30%

About the Perfumer

Amandine Galliano

Amandine Galliano

Amandine Galliano is a French perfumer known for her work with the naturalist brand 100 Bon and the contemporary line Aqualis. Her style emphasizes clean, transparent accords that highlight raw materials, as seen in creations like Cuir Vegetal and Zeste D'orange & Oud. She often balances unexpected contrasts, such as leather with freshness or incense with soft cotton, to craft accessible yet distinctive scents.

Fragrance Notes

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Saffron Saffron
Cardamom Cardamom

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Frankincense Frankincense

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Patchouli Patchouli
Dry Wood Dry Wood
Musk Musk
Unique Character

Incense & Cuir 100 Bon by 100 Bon offers a distinctive olfactory experience that stands out from other fragrances in its category.

Artisanal Creation

Crafted with the finest ingredients and a blend of traditional and modern perfumery techniques, this fragrance represents the pinnacle of the perfumer's art.

Signature Style

Incense & Cuir 100 Bon embodies the distinctive style of 100 Bon while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.

Character Profile

The Mystic Archetype: Portrait of Incense & Cuir 100 Bon

Essence

This person is, above all, a seeker-one who moves through the world with quiet intensity, drawn to the interplay of shadow and substance. Their choice of Incense & Cuir-a fragrance that marries sacred smoke with the supple depth of leather-reveals a soul that thrives in the liminal space between the spiritual and the sensual. The Sage archetype defines them, for they are driven by a hunger for wisdom, yet their wisdom is not abstract; it is lived, worn like the scent on their skin.

Style & Aesthetic

Their wardrobe is a study in deliberate restraint. Dark hues dominate-charcoal, deep brown, black-but never in a way that feels oppressive. Instead, their clothing suggests a quiet confidence, an understanding that true presence does not require clamor. Leather accents appear often: a belt, boots, a jacket softened by time. They favor textures that tell a story-worn-in fabrics, slightly frayed edges, the kind of garments that seem to carry memories.

Their living space mirrors this aesthetic. Perhaps a bookshelf lined with well-thumbed volumes-Nietzsche, Jung, Pessoa, maybe a tattered copy of the Tao Te Ching. Candles burn low; incense lingers in the air. There is order, but not sterility-a place where thought and sensation coexist.

They thrive in environments that allow for both stimulation and retreat. A café corner where they can read undisturbed, a late-night walk through empty streets, a dimly lit bar where the murmur of conversation becomes a backdrop for thought. They may practice meditation, journaling, or some form of ritual-not out of superstition, but because they understand the power of habit to shape the mind.

Work must engage their intellect. They are drawn to fields where analysis and intuition intersect-psychology, writing, art curation, perhaps even perfumery itself. Routine bores them unless it serves a higher purpose; they need to feel that their labor is an extension of their search for meaning.

Philosophy & Values

They are drawn to paradoxes: the sacred and the profane, the ephemeral and the eternal. Incense speaks to their contemplative nature-a mind that turns inward, seeking meaning in silence, ritual, and the unseen. Cuir, on the other hand, grounds them in the tactile world-the weight of a well-worn book, the texture of aged paper, the creak of a leather jacket as they move through dimly lit streets.

They believe in depth over dogma. Organized religion may intrigue them, but they are more likely to weave together threads of mysticism, philosophy, and personal revelation. Stoicism appeals to them-not as a rigid discipline, but as a way of tempering emotion with reason. Yet, they are not cold; they simply prefer intensity to be measured, like incense curling slowly through the air rather than a flame that burns too fast.

Relationships

They are not gregarious, but neither are they reclusive. Their friendships are few but profound, built on shared intellectual curiosity and mutual respect for solitude. They listen more than they speak, and when they do speak, their words carry weight. Romantic partners must understand their need for independence; they will not be possessed, though they may be deeply devoted.

Their shadow here is a tendency toward emotional detachment. They can become so enamored with their own inner world that they forget others may need more warmth, more reassurance. Their love is often expressed through acts rather than words-a carefully chosen gift, a shared silence-but not everyone can decipher this language.

Shadow

For all their wisdom, they are not immune to pride. Their love of depth can curdle into elitism-a quiet disdain for those who live on the surface, who do not share their hunger for the esoteric. They may mistake solitude for superiority, forgetting that wisdom untested by the messiness of human connection is merely theory.

And then there is the danger of over-intellectualizing emotion. They can dissect their feelings with such precision that they never truly feel them. The scent of incense may soothe them, but it can also become a veil-a way to aestheticize melancholy rather than confront it.

Conclusion

Incense & Cuir is their essence: a soul that finds the divine in the material, the profound in the palpable. They walk a line between mystic and realist, forever balancing the urge to transcend with the need to be present. The Sage in them seeks truth, but the shadow warns against mistaking knowledge for wisdom.

They are, in the end, a paradox-a thinker who knows that some truths are felt, not thought; a sensualist who understands that the deepest pleasures are often the quietest.