Secret Garden 100 Bon

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2018
Moderate
Sillage
Good
Longevity
Spring
Best Season
Casual
Best For

Fragrance Story

Secret Garden by 100 Bon is a Floral Fruity fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Secret Garden was launched in 2018. The nose behind this fragrance is Amandine Galliano. Top notes are Citruses, Pink Pepper, Fruity Notes and Green Notes; middle notes are Jasmine, Rose, Iris and Orange Blossom; base notes are Vanilla, Musk, Tonka Bean and Woody Notes.

Composition Profile

vanilla 100%
white floral 85%
citrus 70%
powdery 60%
rose 50%
sweet 40%
fresh 35%
iris 30%
floral 25%
musky 20%

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

Citruses Citruses
Pink Pepper Pink Pepper
Fruity Notes Fruity Notes
Green Notes Green Notes

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Jasmine Jasmine
Rose Rose
Iris Iris
Orange Blossom Orange Blossom

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Vanilla Vanilla
Musk Musk
Tonka Bean Tonka Bean
Woody Notes Woody Notes
Unique Character

Secret Garden 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

Secret Garden 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 Secret Garden 100 Bon

Essence

To love Secret Garden 100 Bon is to embrace the hidden, the poetic, the untamed-a fragrance that whispers of dew-laden petals and the quiet magic of dawn. The person who wears it is not one for the obvious or the loud; they are drawn to the liminal, the spaces between waking and dreaming, where meaning lingers like an unsolved riddle. Their soul is a garden-lush, private, and ever-blooming with symbols only they fully understand.

Above all, they are the Mystic-the seeker who finds divinity in the unseen, the one who listens to the world’s hidden harmonies. The Mystic does not merely observe life; they commune with it. Their senses are finely tuned to the subtleties of existence: the way light filters through leaves, the scent of rain before it falls, the quiet hum of an old book’s pages. They are not interested in dogma but in direct experience, in the moments when the veil between the mundane and the sacred grows thin.

Yet, like all archetypes, the Mystic has a shadow. Their inward gaze can become a labyrinth, their sensitivity a vulnerability. They risk losing themselves in abstraction, mistaking solitude for wisdom, or retreating so far into their inner world that they forget how to return.

Style & Aesthetic

Their wardrobe is an extension of their inner landscape-soft textures, flowing lines, colors that shift with the light. They favor garments that feel lived-in, as though they’ve been passed down through time. There is no ostentation in their appearance, only a quiet insistence on beauty that does not announce itself. A scarf draped just so, a single silver ring, the faintest trace of perfume-these are their signatures.

They are not trend-followers but instinctive curators, assembling a personal mythology through what they wear, what they read, what they keep close. Their home, if they have one, is a sanctuary of half-light and texture: worn wooden floors, shelves bowed under the weight of books, a single candle flickering in a darkened corner.

Philosophy & Values

Their life is a tapestry woven with threads of curiosity and quiet defiance. They reject the tyranny of the obvious, preferring instead the layered, the ambiguous. Their tastes lean toward the timeless-vintage fabrics, handwritten letters, the muted colors of twilight. They might collect odd trinkets: a smooth river stone, a dried flower pressed between pages, a rusted key with no known lock. Each object is a talisman, a fragment of a story only they can complete.

Philosophically, they are neither optimist nor pessimist but something more fluid-a believer in the unseen order of things. They do not trust grand narratives but find solace in small epiphanies: the way a stranger’s laughter echoes unexpectedly, or how a certain scent can resurrect a forgotten memory. They are drawn to poets like Rilke and mystics like Hildegard of Bingen, those who wrote of the world as both flesh and spirit.

Relationships

They do not gather crowds but cultivate depth. Their friendships are few but fierce, built on shared silences as much as words. They are the confidant who listens without judgment, the one who remembers the exact way you take your tea. Yet they guard their own heart carefully, revealing it only in fragments, like scattered petals along a hidden path.

Romantically, they are drawn to those who understand the language of nuance. They do not love loudly or in broad strokes but in whispers, in the spaces between sentences. Their love is a secret garden of its own-lush, wild, and sometimes overgrown. They may struggle with vulnerability, fearing that to be fully known is to lose the mystery that defines them.

Shadow

For all their depth, they are not without flaws. Their introspection can tip into isolation, their love of the unseen into a dismissal of the tangible. They may grow impatient with those who cannot follow their winding thoughts, retreating further into themselves. At their worst, they become the hermit who mistakes solitude for enlightenment, the dreamer who forgets to wake.

And yet, even their shadow has its purpose. It is the necessary counterbalance to their light-the reminder that wisdom must sometimes step into the sun, that the mystic’s visions mean little if they cannot be shared.

Conclusion

To know them is to know that some truths are not spoken but sensed, that beauty often resides just beyond sight. They are the ones who pause to watch the first frost settle on a spider’s web, who find meaning in the way a room holds the scent of rain long after the storm has passed.

They are not for everyone. But for those who learn their language, who are willing to walk the hidden paths with them, they offer a rare gift: the reminder that the world is deeper than it seems, and that the most precious things are often the ones we must lean in to hear.