Krinos Angelos Créations Olfactives
Fragrance Story
Krinos by Angelos Créations Olfactives is a fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Krinos was launched in 2023. The nose behind this fragrance is Angelos Balamis. Top notes are Rhubarb, Timur and Raspberry; middle notes are Lily of the Valley, Lily, Orange Blossom, Cassis and Jasmine Sambac; base notes are White Musk, Sandalwood, Amber and Sea Notes.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Angelos Balamis
Angelos Balamis is a Greek perfumer and the founder of Angelos Créations Olfactives, a niche fragrance house known for its artistic and evocative compositions. His creative signature blends classical French perfumery with Mediterranean and Oriental influences, often featuring rich leathers, lush fruits, and aromatic fougère structures. Notable creations from his catalog include the floral-leather Cuir Fleurissant, the fig-centered Figue De Vertu, and the spicy, sensual Danse Lascive, each reflecting his commitment to narrative-driven scent design.
Fragrance Notes
Krinos Angelos Créations Olfactives by Angelos Créations Olfactives 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.
Krinos Angelos Créations Olfactives embodies the distinctive style of Angelos Créations Olfactives while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Krinos Angelos Créations Olfactives
Essence
The one who chooses Krinos Angelos Créations Olfactives is ruled by the Lover archetype-a being of sensual depth, aesthetic devotion, and an unyielding pursuit of beauty. This is not mere pleasure-seeking, but a philosophy of immersion in life’s textures, scents, and sensations. The Lover does not merely exist; they experience, with a fervor that borders on the sacred. Yet, like all archetypes, the Lover has a shadow-an indulgence that can tip into excess, a passion that risks becoming obsession.
Philosophy & Values
For them, beauty is not superficial-it is the highest form of truth. They reject the utilitarian, the purely functional, believing that life’s meaning is found in its aesthetics. This is not frivolity, but a rebellion against the mundane. They might quote Wilde: "All art is quite useless"-and mean it as praise.
Yet, this devotion to beauty can become a prison. When the pursuit of perfection eclipses authenticity, the Lover risks becoming a mere connoisseur of surfaces, mistaking the exquisite for the profound.
Relationships
In love, they are both devotee and deity. They adore deeply, with a romanticism that borders on theatricality-love letters written in fountain pen, midnight rendezvous under candlelight. Their partners are often artists, dreamers, or those who appreciate the poetry of existence.
But the shadow here is seduction without surrender. They may love the idea of love more than the reality of another’s flaws. Their relationships can become performances, beautiful but fragile, crumbling when faced with the raw, unpolished edges of human imperfection.
Shadow
When unbalanced, the Lover decays into the Decadent-a figure lost in their own indulgences. The fine wine becomes a crutch, the pursuit of pleasure an escape from responsibility. They may grow weary, jaded, mistaking numbness for sophistication. The world, once vibrant, turns into a series of diminishing returns.
Conclusion
Their world is one of deliberate elegance. They do not merely wear clothes; they curate them, favoring fabrics that whisper against the skin-cashmere, silk, linen softened by time. Their home is a sanctuary of tactile pleasures: aged leather books, handblown glass catching the light, the faintest trace of incense lingering in the air. They are drawn to art that evokes emotion-Baroque paintings, the melancholy of Chopin, the decadence of Baudelaire’s poetry.
Food and drink are rituals, not mere sustenance. A perfectly ripe fig, the bitterness of dark chocolate, the slow burn of a well-aged whiskey-they savor each as an act of communion with the senses. Travel is not about destinations, but atmospheres: the spice-laden air of a Marrakech souk, the salt-wind of a Greek island at dusk, the hushed reverence of an old Venetian church.