Finn Art Of Scent - Swiss Perfumes
At a glance
Is Finn Art Of Scent - Swiss Perfumes worth trying?
Finn by Art of Scent - Swiss Perfumes is a Leather fragrance for women and men.
- Best match
- Evening, Special Occasion wear in Fall, Winter
- Performance feel
- Good longevity with Strong sillage
- Signature profile
- woody, aromatic, aquatic with Water Notes, Seaweed, Licorice
The first impression
Finn by Art of Scent - Swiss Perfumes is a Leather fragrance for women and men. Finn was launched during the 2010's. The nose behind this fragrance is Brigitte Witschi. Top notes are Water Notes, Seaweed and Licorice; middle notes are Pine, Myrtle and Vetiver; base notes are Woody Notes, Leather, Musk and Amber.
What shapes the scent
The perfumer behind it
Brigitte Witschi
Brigitte Witschi creates fragrances for Art of Scent - Swiss Perfumes, with a catalog that includes Aarewasser, Bergduft Alpine Rose, Bergduft No 1 Edelweiss, Bergduft No 2 Blauer Enzian, Bergduft No 3 Silberdistel, Dazzling Magnolia, Edouard, and Everglow. Her scents often highlight Alpine botanicals and Swiss natural ingredients. Witschi's work emphasizes purity and a connection to nature.
Notes pyramid
The mood it creates
The Mystic Archetype: Portrait of Finn Art Of Scent - Swiss Perfumes
Essence
Finn conjures the Mystic’s liminal realm-where seaweed and pine meet leather and amber in a haze of salt and smoke. This fragrance is for those who dwell between worlds, decoding whispers in the wind. The aquatic top notes dissolve into woody depths, mirroring their fluid grasp of reality.
Style & Aesthetic
They favor layers-a wool cloak over a linen shirt, silver rings stacked like talismans. Their colors are stormy: slate blues, charcoal grays, the occasional flash of amber like distant lighthouse beams. A pendant of driftwood hangs at their throat, smelling faintly of the sea.
Philosophy & Values
They seek patterns in chaos. The licorice’s aniseed twist and myrtle’s herbal clarity reflect their belief in signs and synchronicity. They collect sea glass and bird bones, arranging them on windowsills to catch the light just so.
Relationships
Conversations with them feel like deciphering riddles. They attract fellow seekers-lovers who leave seashells on their pillow, friends who gift them tattered grimoires. Their bonds are deep but elusive, like the musk’s lingering trail.
Lifestyle
They keep odd hours, reading tarot by candlelight or walking shorelines at midnight. Work might involve restoring old ships or transcribing folklore. Their home is part library, part cabinet of curiosities, always smelling faintly of vetiver and damp parchment.
Shadow
The pine’s crispness warns against losing themselves in abstraction. They must remember that not every omen demands interpretation-sometimes, seaweed is just seaweed.
Conclusion
Finn is a séance in a bottle. Like the Mystic, it blurs the line between earth and ether, inviting us to listen for the stories hidden in the tide.