Cedrat Summer Aromas De Salazar
Fragrance Story
Cedrat Summer by Aromas de Salazar is a Woody Aromatic fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Cedrat Summer was launched in 2024. The nose behind this fragrance is Michael Salazar. Top notes are Lime, Aldehydes, Mezcal, Mango, Sweet Orange, Citron and Bergamot; middle notes are Palm Leaf, Jasmine Sambac, Ylang Ylang and Osmanthus; base notes are Sand, Helvetolide, Indian Sandalwood, Iso E Super, Ambroxan, Oakmoss, Davana, Amber and Virginia Cedar.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Michael Salazar
Michael Salazar is the founder and perfumer behind Aromas de Salazar, an independent brand based in the United States. His catalog includes a wide range of scents, from gourmands like Cafe Fiesta and Blueberry Morning to floral chypres such as Blueberry Chypre. He often experiments with tinctures and unique accords, as seen in Cafe Fiesta Tincture Edition and Cafe Oud 2023.
Fragrance Notes
Top Notes
First impression · 15-30 min
Heart Notes
Core character · 2-4 hours
Base Notes
Lasting impression · 4+ hours
Cedrat Summer Aromas De Salazar by Aromas de Salazar 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.
Cedrat Summer Aromas De Salazar embodies the distinctive style of Aromas de Salazar while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Explorer Archetype: Portrait of Cedrat Summer Aromas De Salazar
Essence
The person who gravitates toward Cedrat Summer Aromas De Salazar is defined by the Explorer archetype, a restless spirit driven by curiosity, sensory pleasure, and the pursuit of novelty. This fragrance-bright, citrusy, with a hint of sun-warmed earth-mirrors their essence: vibrant yet grounded, ephemeral yet deeply rooted in the moment. The Explorer seeks not just to experience life but to taste it, to let the world leave its imprint on them while they, in turn, leave their mark on the world.
Style & Aesthetic
Their style is effortless yet intentional-linen shirts that wrinkle just so, leather sandals worn in but not worn out, a wristwatch that tells time but also hints at distant places. They favor open spaces, both in their home (minimalist, with a few carefully chosen artifacts from travels) and in their mind. They are drawn to the Mediterranean, to coastal towns where the air is thick with salt and citrus, where life slows just enough to be savored.
They are not materialistic in the conventional sense, but they are deeply sensual. A well-made espresso, the texture of sun-bleached paper, the sound of a vinyl record spinning-these are the small luxuries that anchor them. Their philosophy is one of experiential richness: life is not about accumulation but about immersion.
Philosophy & Values
Freedom is their highest ideal, though they might not call it that outright. They resist dogma, whether in politics, religion, or personal relationships. They believe in self-definition-that identity is fluid, shaped by experience rather than inherited. This can make them seem elusive, even to those closest to them.
They value authenticity, but their version of it is dynamic. They are not interested in being the same person they were five years ago; stagnation is their greatest fear. Their relationships thrive on mutual growth-they seek partners and friends who challenge them, who introduce them to new ideas, flavors, and landscapes.
Yet, beneath this outward adaptability lies a quiet stoicism. They endure discomfort with grace, whether it’s a delayed train in a foreign country or an emotional rupture. They do not complain; they adjust.
Shadow
The Explorer’s greatest strength-their relentless curiosity-can also be their undoing. Their need for novelty can manifest as rootlessness, an inability to commit to people, places, or even their own ambitions. They may mistake movement for progress, believing that if they keep going, they will eventually arrive-somewhere, anywhere.
This can lead to a superficial engagement with life. They collect experiences like souvenirs, but depth requires stillness, and stillness is their antithesis. Relationships may suffer; they are often loved more deeply than they love, not out of malice but because their heart is always half elsewhere.
There is also a fear of mundanity, a terror of being ordinary. They may dismiss routine as death, failing to see that even the most vibrant lives are built on small, repeated acts of devotion-to a craft, a person, a home.
The Explorer is neither wholly free nor entirely lost. They are in flux, and that is their nature. Their fragrance-bright, fleeting, yet lingering-captures this duality. They teach others to embrace the present, to find beauty in transience. But they must also learn that some roots do not trap; they nourish.
They are the kind of person who leaves a party just as it peaks, not because they are bored, but because they want to remember it exactly as it was-perfect, unspoiled by decline. And perhaps that is their tragedy: they love the world too much to ever let it fully love them back.