Celluloid Aether

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2017
Moderate
Sillage
Good
Longevity
Fall
Best Season
Evening
Best For

Fragrance Story

Celluloid by Aether is a fragrance for women and men. Celluloid was launched in 2017. The nose behind this fragrance is Amelie Bourgeois. Top notes are Rum, Cherry and Fruits; middle notes are Violet, Orris and Iris; base notes are Iso E Super and Cashmeran.

Composition Profile

woody 100%
musky 85%
powdery 70%
amber 60%
iris 50%
violet 40%

About the Perfumer

Amelie Bourgeois

Amelie Bourgeois

Amelie Bourgeois is a French perfumer known for her work with the niche houses Aether and Alexandre.J. Her style blends experimental, synthetic accords with natural elements, often exploring contrasts like citrus and musk or rose and alkanes. She created the Aether Oxyde and Carboneum compositions, as well as Alexandre.J’s Mandarine Sultane and Passion Bliss.

Fragrance Notes

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Rum Rum
Cherry Cherry
Fruits Fruits

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Violet Violet
Orris Orris
Iris Iris

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Iso E Super Iso E Super
Cashmeran Cashmeran
Unique Character

Celluloid Aether by Aether 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

Celluloid Aether embodies the distinctive style of Aether while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.

Character Profile

The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Celluloid Aether

Essence

This person is defined by the Visionary archetype-a seeker of intangible truths, a weaver of ideas, and a conjurer of worlds unseen. Like the alchemist who transmutes base matter into gold, they are drawn to fragrances that defy convention, scents that evoke the liminal space between memory and imagination. Celluloid Aether, with its paradoxical blend of nostalgia and futurism, suits them perfectly-it is a fragrance not merely worn but experienced, a sensory manifesto of their inner world.

Style & Aesthetic

Their appearance is deliberate but never contrived. They favor textures that suggest depth-worn leather, raw silk, the faintest hint of oxidation on a vintage ring. Their wardrobe is a curated archive of moods: a tailored coat for nights of contemplation, a rumpled linen shirt for mornings of wandering. They are drawn to the cinematic-not in the sense of glamour, but in the way light falls across a room, how shadows carve meaning from emptiness.

Their living space is an extension of their mind: shelves lined with esoteric books, a record player spinning ambient soundscapes, a single candle burning low. They are not minimalists, nor maximalists-they are alchemists of atmosphere, transforming space into an immersive experience.

They do not live by routine but by rhythm. Their days are shaped by impulse and intuition: a sudden trip to an obscure art exhibit, a midnight walk through empty streets, hours lost in a book that seems to whisper secrets only they can hear. They are not reckless, but they are not bound by convention-career, stability, and societal expectations are secondary to the pursuit of meaning.

They may work in creative fields-film, writing, design-or they may reject traditional work entirely, preferring a life of fluidity. Money is not a goal but a means to sustain their explorations. They are not lazy, but their energy is cyclical: periods of feverish productivity followed by stretches of quiet withdrawal.

Philosophy & Values

Their mind is a theater of thought, where ideas flicker like old film reels-sometimes grainy, sometimes luminous, always evocative. They are drawn to the sublime-that which is beautiful yet unsettling, familiar yet strange. They value depth over dogma, preferring questions to answers. Their philosophy is not rigid but fluid, shaped by paradox: they believe in the permanence of impermanence, the reality of illusion.

They are not content with surface pleasures; even their hedonism is intellectual. A glass of wine is not just a drink but an exploration of terroir, history, and sensation. A conversation is not mere exchange but an act of co-creation. They despise banality, yet they are not elitists-they seek the extraordinary in the ordinary, the mythic in the mundane.

Relationships

They attract others effortlessly, yet remain slightly out of reach. Their charm lies in their ability to make people feel seen, as if they alone understand the hidden currents beneath the surface. But this very quality can become a barrier-they are more comfortable in the realm of ideas than in the messiness of raw emotion.

Their romantic relationships are intense but ephemeral, like a fragrance that lingers just long enough to haunt. They crave connection but fear engulfment, so they maintain a delicate balance between presence and detachment. Their friendships are built on mutual fascination-they are drawn to fellow seekers, those who can match their intellectual fervor without demanding emotional transparency.

Shadow

Their brilliance has a cost. In their quest for the transcendent, they risk becoming unmoored from the tangible. They may romanticize melancholy, mistaking detachment for depth. Their aversion to the mundane can manifest as restlessness, an inability to commit-to people, to projects, to a stable sense of self.

At their worst, they become the eternal spectator, observing life rather than living it. Their mind, once a sanctuary, can turn into a labyrinth where they lose themselves in abstraction. They may grow impatient with those who cannot follow them into the depths, dismissing simpler joys as trivial.

Conclusion

To love Celluloid Aether is to embrace the ephemeral, to find beauty in the fleeting. This person is neither wholly of this world nor entirely apart from it-they exist in the liminal, where scent becomes memory, where thought becomes myth. Their greatest strength is their ability to transform perception; their greatest danger is losing themselves in the act.

They are not here to conform but to conjure-to remind others that reality is not fixed, that the most profound truths are often whispered, not shouted. And if they sometimes vanish into their own visions, it is only because they are searching for something even they cannot name.