8 Days A Week Astrophil & Stella
Fragrance Story
8 Days a Week by Astrophil & Stella is a fragrance for women and men. 8 Days a Week was launched in 2020. The nose behind this fragrance is Cécile Zarokian. Top notes are Mandarin Orange, Green Notes, Black Currant and Pink Pepper; middle notes are Orange Blossom, Jasmine Sambac and Iris; base notes are Musk, Patchouli and Cedar.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Cécile Zarokian
Cécile Zarokian is a perfumer who has created numerous fragrances for Amouage. Her works include Epic 56 Woman Amouage, Leather Sadah Amouage, Material Amouage, and Opus Xiii - Silver Oud Amouage. She also crafted Opus Xiv - Royal Tobacco Amouage, Oud Ulya Amouage, Outlands Amouage, and Rose Aqor Amouage. Her portfolio showcases a range of luxurious and complex compositions.
Fragrance Notes
Character Profile
The Lover Archetype: Portrait of 8 Days A Week Astrophil & Stella
Essence
The one who wears 8 Days A Week Astrophil & Stella is a modern incarnation of the Poet-Lover, an archetype that fuses the romantic idealism of the Lover with the creative fervor of the Artist. Their soul is drawn to beauty in its most transcendent forms-whether in words, scents, or fleeting moments of human connection. Like the 16th-century sonnet sequence that inspired the fragrance’s name, they see love as both a celestial force and an earthly ache.
This archetype thrives on intensity, but not the kind that burns out quickly. Their passion is slow-burning, a quiet obsession with the sublime. They do not merely wear a fragrance; they inhabit it, letting its blend of citrus, spice, and woody warmth become an extension of their own mythos.
Shadow
Their greatest strength is their capacity for wonder. They see magic in the mundane-the way steam curls from a teacup, the sound of rain on cobblestones at midnight. They are the ones who make others feel truly seen, because they observe the world with a poet’s eye.
But their shadow is their tendency toward escapism. When life becomes too prosaic, they retreat into their own fantasies, romanticizing solitude to the point of isolation. They may grow impatient with those who do not share their intensity, dismissing simpler joys as shallow. At their worst, they become the tragic figure of their own narrative, mistaking self-indulgence for depth.
Conclusion
Their tastes are refined but never ostentatious. They prefer the understated elegance of a well-worn leather-bound book over flashy trends, the quiet depth of a jazz record over the clamor of pop. Their wardrobe leans toward timeless textures-soft cashmere, aged denim, the occasional silk scarf-always with a hint of deliberate imperfection, as if to say: I am not polished, but I am complete.
Philosophically, they are drawn to paradox. They believe in love as destiny, yet they know it is also a choice. They see the universe as both indifferent and deeply meaningful, a duality that fuels their creative restlessness. Their values are rooted in authenticity; they despise pretense, yet they themselves are not immune to the occasional affectation-a carefully curated bookshelf, a deliberately obscure film reference.
In relationships, they are both devoted and elusive. They crave deep connection but fear losing themselves in it. Their love is a sonnet: structured yet overflowing, precise yet wild at the edges. They are the kind of lover who leaves handwritten notes in unexpected places, who remembers the exact way the light fell on your face the first time you met. But they are also prone to melancholy, to withdrawing when reality fails to match their inner visions.