Lucepura Accendis
Fragrance Story
Lucepura by Accendis is a Woody Aromatic fragrance for women and men. Lucepura was launched in 2017. The nose behind this fragrance is Maurizio Cerizza. Top notes are Sicilian Lemon, Watermelon and Lavender; middle notes are Pine, Sandalwood and Tobacco; base notes are Amber, Borage and Musk.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Maurizio Cerizza
Maurizio Cerizza is an Italian perfumer with a diverse portfolio spanning brands like Absolument Parfumeur, Accendis, and Acqua di Biella. He created Luxury Overdose for Absolument Parfumeur and the Fiorialux, Lucepura, and Lucevera series for Accendis. Cerizza's work often features floral, luminous, and sweet accords, as seen in Luna Dulcius and Baraja. His fragrances are known for their refined, elegant compositions.
Fragrance Notes
Character Profile
The Alchemist Archetype: Portrait of Lucepura Accendis
Essence
The one who wears Lucepura Accendis is not merely a person but a force of transformation. Their essence aligns most closely with the Magician, the Jungian archetype of metamorphosis, mastery, and the bridging of worlds. Like the fragrance itself-fiery, luminous, yet enigmatic-they are drawn to the alchemy of existence, turning the mundane into the extraordinary. They do not simply live; they transmute.
This is not the Magician as mere illusionist, but as the wielder of hidden truths, the one who sees patterns where others see chaos. They are drawn to the interplay of light and shadow, drawn to the scent of burning amber, smoldering woods, and the faintest whisper of something celestial-just as they are drawn to the liminal spaces of thought and experience.
Style & Aesthetic
Their presence is magnetic, not through ostentation but through an unspoken depth. They favor textures that hint at duality-soft leather, raw silk, the warmth of aged brass against cold stone. Their wardrobe is curated, not for trends, but for resonance: deep burgundies, midnight blues, the occasional shock of gold. They understand that clothing is not just fabric but a language.
They are drawn to art that disturbs as much as it enchants-Baroque chiaroscuro, the surrealism of Remedios Varo, the haunting compositions of Arvo Pärt. Their bookshelf holds equal parts philosophy, esoterica, and well-worn poetry. They do not consume culture passively; they dissect it, seeking the hidden threads that connect disparate ideas.
Philosophy & Values
To them, life is an experiment. They believe in the power of will, the necessity of reinvention, and the sacred act of questioning. They are neither optimist nor pessimist but something more fluid-a possibilist, one who sees reality as malleable. Their guiding principle might be: "What is, is not all that can be."
Yet this very strength is also their vulnerability. Their love of transformation can make them restless, always seeking the next revelation, the next self to shed and rebuild. They may struggle with commitment-not out of fear, but out of an insatiable hunger for the unknown.
Relationships
They attract others effortlessly, for there is something intoxicating in their presence-a promise of depth, of secrets waiting to be uncovered. Their lovers and friends are chosen not for convenience, but for their ability to engage in the dance of minds. They crave conversations that last until dawn, where ideas are not just exchanged but reforged.
But intimacy is a double-edged sword. Their Magician’s nature means they can retreat into their own labyrinth, leaving others feeling like outsiders to their inner sanctum. They may unintentionally manipulate, not out of malice, but because they see people as puzzles to be solved rather than souls to be known.
Shadow
Every archetype has its dark reflection. For the Magician, it is the temptation of control-the belief that with enough knowledge, enough will, they can bend all of life to their design. When unbalanced, they may slip into arrogance, dismissing those who do not share their vision as blind or unenlightened.
Their greatest fear? Stagnation. Yet in fleeing it, they may become the very thing they despise-a perpetual seeker who never truly arrives, always chasing the next transformation without ever grounding in the present.
Conclusion
They are not for everyone. Some will find them too intense, too elusive. But for those who understand them, they are a beacon-a reminder that life is not fixed, that identity is not a cage but a crucible.
They leave traces of themselves in the minds of those they touch, like the lingering smoke of Lucepura Accendis-warm, mysterious, impossible to grasp, impossible to forget.
And perhaps that is enough.