A Ghost House Anna Zworykina Perfumes

Unisex
Parfum/Extrait
Year: 2009
Strong
Sillage
Excellent
Longevity
Fall
Best Season
Evening
Best For

Fragrance Story

A Ghost House by Anna Zworykina Perfumes is a Woody fragrance for women and men. A Ghost House was launched in 2009. The nose behind this fragrance is Anna Zworykina.

Composition Profile

woody 100%
amber 85%
oud 70%
balsamic 60%
aromatic 50%
earthy 40%
patchouli 35%
smoky 30%
warm spicy 25%
green 20%

About the Perfumer

Anna Zworykina

Anna Zworykina

Anna Zworykina is an independent Russian perfumer known for her conceptual, narrative-driven approach to fragrance. Her style often blends stark contrasts, pairing dark, smoky, or bitter notes with unexpected brightness, as seen in creations like Black Stone and Bitter Glass. She draws inspiration from literature, memory, and nature, crafting scents such as Apple Orchard and A Ghost House that evoke specific atmospheres and emotions.

Fragrance Notes

All Notes

Complete scent profile

Agarwood (Oud) Agarwood (Oud)
Vetiver Vetiver
Patchouli Patchouli
Incense Incense
Guaiac Wood Guaiac Wood
Choya Loban Choya Loban
Cassia Cassia
Labdanum Labdanum
Rose Rose

Character Profile

The Lover Archetype: Portrait of A Ghost House Anna Zworykina Perfumes

Essence

This person is defined by the Mystic archetype-a seeker of hidden truths, drawn to the intangible and the ephemeral. They do not merely wear a fragrance; they inhabit it, as if it were a whispered secret between their soul and the unseen. A Ghost House by Anna Zworykina, with its haunting, elusive quality, mirrors their inner world: a place where reality blurs, where the past lingers like a half-remembered dream, and where meaning is found in the spaces between words.

Style & Aesthetic

Their wardrobe is an extension of their psyche-textured, layered, slightly undone. They favor fabrics that whisper rather than shout: raw silk, aged linen, wool that carries the scent of old libraries. Their colors are muted, as if faded by time-slate grays, deep blues, the ghostly white of birch bark. They do not follow trends but are drawn to pieces with history, imperfections, a sense of having been touched by time.

Their home is a curated dreamscape: antique mirrors that distort reflections, books with cracked spines, candles that burn low. They surround themselves with objects that seem to hold stories, as if the past lingers in the grain of wood or the scent of old paper.

They are not bound by routine, nor are they reckless. They move through life with a quiet deliberation, as if listening to a rhythm only they can hear. They may work in creative fields-writing, art, music-or in professions that require deep introspection, like psychology or archival work. Even in mundane tasks, they seek the sacred: brewing tea becomes a ritual, a walk in the rain a meditation.

But their shadow is a reluctance to fully engage with the material world. They may drift, mistaking detachment for transcendence. Responsibilities can feel like chains; commitments, like surrenders to the ordinary.

Philosophy & Values

They are not content with surface explanations. Life, to them, is a palimpsest-layers of meaning waiting to be uncovered. They may be drawn to mysticism, literature, or art that explores the liminal: the threshold between life and death, memory and oblivion. Their philosophy is not dogmatic but fluid, shaped by intuition rather than doctrine. They value depth over certainty, mystery over clarity.

Yet this very strength can become their shadow. Their search for hidden truths can lead them into labyrinths of their own making, where reality dissolves into endless interpretation. They may struggle with grounding, mistaking ambiguity for wisdom, or evasion for enlightenment.

Relationships

They do not love lightly, nor do they love conventionally. Their relationships are built on unspoken understandings, shared silences, the kind of connection that exists in glances rather than declarations. They are drawn to those who carry their own mysteries-artists, wanderers, those who have known loss.

But their shadow emerges here as well. Their preference for the enigmatic can make them elusive, even to those who love them. They may withhold, believing that to be fully known is to be diminished. Their partners may feel like they are chasing a ghost-always present, never quite within reach.

Shadow

At their best, they are guides to the unseen, offering others a glimpse into the depths they so cherish. They remind us that not everything must be named to be real.

At their worst, they become lost in their own labyrinth, mistaking solitude for wisdom, evasion for freedom. The challenge of their life is to touch the intangible without losing their grip on the world.

They are the keeper of A Ghost House-not because they fear the living, but because they know that some truths can only be found in the quiet, the forgotten, the almost-gone.