Burnt Cedar Rainbow Doves 4160 Tuesdays
Fragrance Story
Burnt Cedar Rainbow Doves by 4160 Tuesdays is a Woody Floral Musk fragrance for women and men. Burnt Cedar Rainbow Doves was launched in 2019. The nose behind this fragrance is Sarah McCartney.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Sarah McCartney
Sarah McCartney is the founder and perfumer of 4160 Tuesdays, a London-based niche perfume house. She has created numerous fragrances, including #mrsglossmademedoit, A Flame In Your Heart, and A Walk In The Forest. McCartney's style is playful and narrative-driven, often inspired by literature, history, and everyday life. She is known for using high-quality ingredients and for her engaging storytelling through scent.
Fragrance Notes
Burnt Cedar Rainbow Doves 4160 Tuesdays by 4160 Tuesdays offers a distinctive olfactory experience that stands out from other fragrances in its category.
Crafted with the finest ingredients and a blend of traditional and modern perfumery techniques, this fragrance represents the pinnacle of the perfumer's art.
Burnt Cedar Rainbow Doves 4160 Tuesdays embodies the distinctive style of 4160 Tuesdays while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Alchemist Archetype: Portrait of Burnt Cedar Rainbow Doves 4160 Tuesdays
Essence
This person is most closely aligned with the Sage-the seeker of hidden truths, the one who distills wisdom from the raw materials of experience. The fragrance Burnt Cedar Rainbow Doves is not merely a scent to them; it is an alchemical formula, a paradox of fire and flight, destruction and rebirth. The Sage does not simply wear a perfume-they decode it, extracting meaning from its smoky depths and ethereal sweetness. They are drawn to the interplay of opposites: the charred wood and the iridescent doves, the weight of history and the lightness of imagination.
Relationships
They are not gregarious, but their presence lingers. People are drawn to their quiet intensity, the way they listen as if unraveling a riddle in every word spoken to them. Their closest relationships are few but profound, built on mutual fascination rather than convenience. They do not suffer fools, but they are patient with those who seek understanding.
Yet, the Sage’s shadow is detachment. Their love of wisdom can become a retreat from life, a preference for the abstract over the messy reality of human connection. They may grow impatient with those who do not share their depth, dismissing simpler joys as trivial. At worst, they become the hermit, hoarding insights like a dragon guarding gold, forgetting that wisdom must be shared to remain alive.
Conclusion
Their tastes are deliberate, almost ritualistic. They prefer objects with a patina-antique books, well-worn leather, hand-thrown ceramics-things that bear the marks of time. Their style is understated but intentional, favoring textures that invite touch: raw linen, aged brass, unpolished stone. They might collect oddities-a vial of desert sand, a fragment of meteorite-not for display, but for the quiet thrill of holding a piece of the world’s mystery.
Philosophy is not an abstract exercise for them; it is lived. They believe in the sacredness of transformation-that burning away the unnecessary reveals the essential. Their values are rooted in authenticity, but not the shallow kind that demands constant confession. Rather, they prize the authenticity of becoming, the slow work of refining oneself like incense rising from embers.