Dolce Treviso Acca Kappa

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

Fragrance Story

Dolce Treviso by Acca Kappa is a Oriental Vanilla fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Dolce Treviso was launched in 2024. The nose behind this fragrance is Vincent Ricord. Top notes are Coffee, Whipped Cream, Vanilla Flower and Musk; middle notes are Tiramisu, Roasted Coffee Beans and Cacao; base notes are Tahitian Vanilla, Benzoin and Heliotrope.

Composition Profile

sweet 100%
vanilla 85%
coffee 70%
warm spicy 60%
cacao 50%
powdery 40%

About the Perfumer

Vincent Ricord

Vincent Ricord

Vincent Ricord is a perfumer with a wide-ranging portfolio including Acca Kappa, Clive Christian, and Dylan Jeffries. His catalog features Dolce Treviso, Blonde Amber, and Town & Country, as well as Blaze and Crave. Ricord's work spans fresh, woody, and amber accords. He is known for creating versatile and accessible fragrances.

Fragrance Notes

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Coffee Coffee
Whipped Cream Whipped Cream
Vanilla Flower Vanilla Flower
Musk Musk

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Tiramisu Tiramisu
Roasted Coffee Beans Roasted Coffee Beans
Cacao Cacao

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Tahitian Vanilla Tahitian Vanilla
Benzoin Benzoin
Heliotrope Heliotrope
Unique Character

Dolce Treviso Acca Kappa by Acca Kappa 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

Dolce Treviso Acca Kappa embodies the distinctive style of Acca Kappa while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.

Character Profile

The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Dolce Treviso Acca Kappa

Essence

The one who chooses Dolce Treviso Acca Kappa is a devotee of beauty-not merely in the superficial sense, but in the way life itself unfolds as an aesthetic experience. The fragrance, with its blend of fig, bergamot, and musk, is a paradox: fresh yet deep, delicate yet enduring. This person is drawn to the tension between lightness and intensity, much like their own nature. They are, at their core, an embodiment of The Lover archetype-one who seeks connection, sensuality, and meaning through the senses.

Their philosophy is simple yet profound: life must be felt, not just lived. They reject the cold pragmatism of the modern world, favoring instead a world woven with poetry, touch, and emotional resonance. They do not merely walk through a garden; they inhale its breath, trace the veins of its leaves, and feel the weight of its silence.

Style & Aesthetic

Their tastes are refined but never ostentatious. They prefer understated elegance-linen shirts that drape just so, a well-worn leather journal, the patina of time on brass or wood. Their home is a sanctuary of textures: wool throws, clay vases, the scent of dried lavender in drawers. They are drawn to art that evokes emotion-Impressionist paintings, the music of Debussy, the prose of Rilke.

Food and drink are rituals, not mere sustenance. A perfectly ripe peach, a glass of aged Barolo, the slow unfurling of steam from a cup of jasmine tea-these are moments to be savored. They do not rush; they linger, allowing pleasure to unfold at its own pace.

They walk a fine line between indulgence and restraint. They may spend hours selecting the perfect wine, yet fast for days to sharpen their senses. They are drawn to travel-not for sightseeing, but for immersion. A week in a Tuscan villa, the scent of cypress trees at dusk, the taste of salt on the Adriatic wind-these are the experiences that sustain them.

Yet their pursuit of beauty can tip into decadence. The shadow of The Lover is excess-luxury as escape, pleasure as avoidance. When disillusioned, they may lose themselves in sensory distractions rather than confront the void beneath.

Philosophy & Values

They believe in the sacredness of feeling. In a culture obsessed with efficiency and detachment, they stand as a quiet rebel, insisting that emotion is not weakness but wisdom. Their values are rooted in authenticity-they despise pretense, though they themselves are not immune to it.

Love, for them, is both a refuge and a crucible. They seek relationships that are intense, meaningful, and transformative. They are not interested in casual connections; they crave depth, the kind of intimacy that leaves both parties altered. Yet this very idealism can become their undoing-when reality fails to match their vision, they may withdraw into melancholy or become possessive, fearing the loss of what they cherish most.

Relationships

They love fiercely, with a devotion that borders on obsession. Their partners are drawn to their warmth, their attentiveness, the way they make even ordinary moments feel sacred. But this same intensity can suffocate. The shadow of The Lover is jealousy, a fear of abandonment that twists devotion into control. They must learn that love, like fragrance, cannot be contained-it must be allowed to breathe.

Friendships, too, are deep but few. They do not scatter their affections lightly. Those who earn their trust find a loyal confidant, one who listens with rare empathy. But they are easily wounded by betrayal, and once trust is broken, reconciliation is nearly impossible.

Shadow

Their greatest strength-their capacity for deep feeling-is also their greatest vulnerability. When their ideals are shattered, they do not merely grieve; they are consumed by it. They may become melodramatic, seeing every disappointment as a cosmic betrayal. Their aestheticism can curdle into vanity, their passion into possessiveness.

Yet even in their darkest moments, they retain a flicker of grace. They understand that suffering, too, has its own terrible beauty. And so they endure, not with stoic detachment, but with the full weight of their emotion-knowing that to feel deeply is to be fully alive.

Conclusion

They are not meant for half-measures. Their life is a quest-not for power, not for wealth, but for those fleeting moments when the world reveals itself as something more. They will always be drawn to the scent of figs in the sun, the brush of skin against silk, the quiet thrill of a shared glance.

To love them is to be awakened. To lose them is to remember what it means to burn.