Amyi 3.17 Amyi
Fragrance Story
Amyi 3.17 by Amyi is a Woody fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Amyi 3.17 was launched in 2022. The nose behind this fragrance is Maria Fernanda Faigle. Top note is Thyme; middle notes are Rose Petals, Ylang-Ylang, Cumin and Labdanum; base notes are Animal notes, Sweat and Sandalwood.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Maria Fernanda Faigle
Maria Fernanda Faigle is a perfumer known for her work with the Amyi brand, creating a series of fragrances under the Amyi 3.16, 3.17, 3.18, and 4.19 labels. Her compositions often explore abstract and minimalist themes, reflecting a modern approach to scent. Faigle's creations are recognized for their subtle complexity and artistic restraint.
Fragrance Notes
Amyi 3.17 Amyi by Amyi 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.
Amyi 3.17 Amyi embodies the distinctive style of Amyi while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Amyi 3.17 Amyi
Essence
At the core of this individual’s being resides The Lover, an archetype that thrives on passion, sensuality, and the pursuit of beauty in all its forms. Amyi 3.17-a fragrance that balances the warmth of amber with the sharpness of citrus and the depth of woody undertones-mirrors their essence: a soul drawn to intensity, yet refined enough to avoid excess. The Lover does not merely seek pleasure; they seek meaning in pleasure, a philosophy that elevates their desires beyond the mundane.
This person is not content with superficial experiences. They crave depth-whether in art, relationships, or the quiet moments of solitude where a scent lingers on their skin like a whispered secret. Their life is an ongoing dialogue between the sensual and the sublime.
Style & Aesthetic
Their tastes are deliberate, curated with an artist’s eye. They favor textures that invite touch-cashmere, aged leather, silk that slips through fingers like water. Their home is a sanctuary of contrasts: dark wood against white linen, a single bold painting in an otherwise muted room. They understand that restraint heightens impact, and so they wield beauty like a blade-precise, intentional, unforgettable.
Music is never background noise; it is an event. Jazz for its improvisation, classical for its structure, the occasional haunting folk melody that speaks of longing. They drink wine not to intoxicate but to savor-each sip a study in terroir, history, and craftsmanship.
They rise early, not out of obligation but because dawn is when the world feels most alive to them. Their mornings are rituals: black coffee in a handmade ceramic cup, a few pages of poetry, the deliberate application of Amyi 3.17-a scent that grounds them before they step into the day.
Work is either a calling or a necessary distraction. If they are fortunate enough to do what they love, they pour themselves into it with near-religious devotion. If not, they treat it as a means to fund their true passions-travel, art, the occasional reckless splurge on a bottle of vintage wine.
Philosophy & Values
They reject the trivial. Life, to them, is too brief for half-hearted commitments or lukewarm passions. Their philosophy is one of distillation: strip away the unnecessary, and what remains must be exquisite. This extends to their relationships-they have little patience for small talk, but will engage in conversations that last until dawn, dissecting love, death, and the nature of desire.
They value authenticity above all. A counterfeit emotion, a forced smile, a hollow compliment-these are offenses to their sensibilities. Yet this very idealism can become their undoing, for the world is rarely as pure as they wish it to be.
Relationships
To love them is to be seen in high definition-flaws illuminated, virtues exalted. They do not love lightly; when they commit, it is with a ferocity that can overwhelm the unprepared. Their partners are often artists, thinkers, or wanderers-people who understand that love is not a passive state but an active creation.
Yet here lies their shadow: the fear of abandonment. The Lover, in their quest for perfection, may mistake intensity for permanence. When a relationship falters, they do not adjust-they either cling or sever entirely, unable to tolerate the middle ground where most human connections reside.
Shadow
Their greatest strength-their relentless pursuit of the beautiful-can become their prison. When life fails to meet their standards, they may withdraw into disillusionment, dismissing what is merely good in favor of the unattainably perfect. This idealism, untempered, breeds melancholy.
They may also fall prey to hedonic exhaustion-chasing sensation after sensation, only to find each new experience slightly duller than the last. The Lover risks becoming jaded, mistaking the accumulation of pleasures for fulfillment.
Conclusion
They are neither hedonist nor ascetic, but something in between-a soul who understands that ecstasy and restraint are two sides of the same coin. Their life is a testament to the belief that beauty is not frivolous, but essential.
Yet they must beware: the shadow of The Lover is the belief that only the extraordinary is worth living for. In their quest for the sublime, they may overlook the quiet grace of the ordinary-the unremarkable joys that, in the end, make up a life.
To wear Amyi 3.17 is to declare, silently but unmistakably: I will not settle for less than magic. And so they walk through the world, half-poet, half-connoisseur, forever in search of the next thing that will make their heart ache with its perfection.