Coffee And Chocolate Anna Zworykina Perfumes

Unisex
Unknown
Year: 2011
Moderate
Sillage
Good
Longevity
Winter
Best Season
Evening
Best For

Fragrance Story

Coffee and Chocolate by Anna Zworykina Perfumes is a fragrance for women and men. Coffee and Chocolate was launched in 2011. The nose behind this fragrance is Anna Zworykina.

Composition Profile

warm spicy 100%
cacao 85%
woody 70%
citrus 60%
coffee 50%
amber 40%
fresh spicy 35%
vanilla 30%
patchouli 25%
earthy 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

Cacao Cacao
Bitter Orange Bitter Orange
Coffee Coffee
Labdanum Labdanum
Vanilla Vanilla
Patchouli Patchouli
Black Pepper Black Pepper
Vetiver Vetiver
Sandalwood Sandalwood
Jasmine Jasmine
Orange Blossom Orange Blossom
Unique Character

Coffee And Chocolate Anna Zworykina Perfumes by Anna Zworykina Perfumes 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

Coffee And Chocolate Anna Zworykina Perfumes embodies the distinctive style of Anna Zworykina Perfumes while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.

Character Profile

The Alchemist Archetype: Portrait of Coffee And Chocolate Anna Zworykina Perfumes

Essence

To wear Coffee and Chocolate by Anna Zworykina is to embrace the alchemy of transformation-where the bitter and the sweet merge into something richer than either could be alone. This person is not merely drawn to warmth, but to the depths hidden within it. Their essence is one of synthesis, of turning raw experience into something profound. They are, at their core, The Alchemist-an archetype that seeks to transmute the mundane into the extraordinary.

The Alchemist is drawn to complexity, to the interplay of contrasts. Coffee is sharp, invigorating, a stimulant of the mind; chocolate is indulgent, sensual, a balm for the soul. Together, they form a duality that mirrors this person’s inner world-intellectual yet hedonistic, disciplined yet yielding. They do not merely consume life; they refine it, seeking meaning in the interplay of pleasure and thought.

Their tastes are layered, favoring the richness of dark roast coffee, the bitterness of high-cacao chocolate, the warmth of aged whiskey-anything that carries depth and history. They are drawn to textures: worn leather, rough linen, the weight of a well-crafted book. Their style is understated but deliberate, favoring earth tones and muted elegance, as if they are curating an atmosphere rather than merely dressing a body.

Style & Aesthetic

Their home is a sanctuary of controlled chaos-books stacked beside coffee cups, half-finished projects littering a desk, the scent of dark roast lingering in the air. They thrive in environments that allow for both solitude and stimulation: a quiet corner in a bustling café, a dimly lit study, a kitchen where experiments in flavor are a nightly ritual.

They are not idle. Even their leisure is purposeful-reading is not escapism but mining for insight; cooking is not mere sustenance but alchemy in practice. They may struggle with rest, seeing idleness as wasted potential. Yet in their best moments, they understand that even the alchemist must sometimes step back and let the elements settle on their own.

Philosophy & Values

For the Alchemist, life is an experiment. They do not accept things at face value; they probe, question, and refine. Their philosophy is one of transformation-not in the sense of escape, but of elevation. They believe in the potential of all things to become more than they appear. This makes them both an idealist and a pragmatist: they see the gold hidden in the ore, but they also know the fire required to extract it.

They value wisdom over knowledge, experience over dogma. Tradition interests them only insofar as it can be reinterpreted, reshaped into something living. They are drawn to mysticism, not as superstition, but as a language for the ineffable-alchemy, Jungian psychology, and even certain strands of existential philosophy resonate with them.

Yet their greatest strength is also their greatest peril. The Alchemist risks becoming lost in their own processes, refining endlessly without ever declaring anything finished. They may grow frustrated with the world’s refusal to transform as quickly as they wish, or they may become so absorbed in their inner experiments that they neglect the simple, unrefined joys of existence.

Relationships

The Alchemist does not seek superficial connections. Their relationships are crucibles-spaces where raw emotions and ideas are tested, blended, and distilled into something deeper. They are drawn to those who challenge them, who refuse to remain static. Their love is intense, sometimes overwhelming, because they see in their partner not just who they are, but who they could become.

Yet this very intensity can be their undoing. Not everyone wishes to be transmuted. Some resist the Alchemist’s gaze, feeling scrutinized rather than cherished. The shadow of this archetype is the temptation to manipulate, to impose transformation rather than allowing it to unfold naturally. They must learn that not all gold is won through fire-some things ripen in their own time.

Shadow

The Alchemist’s flaw is impatience-with themselves, with others, with the slow unfolding of life. They may grow cynical when their transformations fail, or worse, become dogmatic in their pursuit of change, insisting that their way is the only true path. They risk becoming the very thing they despise: a rigid philosopher who no longer listens to the world, only to their own theories.

And yet, in their darkest moments, they may also fear that they themselves are the base metal-that despite all their refining, they will never truly become gold. This is their deepest vulnerability: the suspicion that their quest is futile.

Conclusion

Coffee and Chocolate is not a fragrance for those who seek simplicity. It is for those who find beauty in the tension between opposites, who believe that life’s bitterness only makes its sweetness more profound. The Alchemist knows that nothing is ever finished-not the self, not love, not wisdom. They are forever in the process of becoming.

And perhaps that is enough.