Burgundy Oud Atelier Materi
Fragrance Story
Burgundy Oud by Atelier Materi is a Oriental Woody fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Burgundy Oud was launched in 2024. The nose behind this fragrance is Celine Perdriel. Top notes are Blackcurrant, Bergamot and Guatemalan Cardamom; middle notes are Geranium, Davana and Magnolia; base notes are Oud, Leather and Amyris.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Celine Perdriel
Celine Perdriel is a French perfumer known for her work with Atelier Materi, where she has created scents like Ambre Papier and Cuir Nilam. Her portfolio also includes the fresh Cèdre Figalia and the floral Rose Ardoise. She has additionally crafted fragrances for Faberlic and Good Water Perfume, demonstrating a range from woody to aquatic notes.
Fragrance Notes
Burgundy Oud Atelier Materi by Atelier Materi 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.
Burgundy Oud Atelier Materi embodies the distinctive style of Atelier Materi while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Alchemist Archetype: Portrait of Burgundy Oud Atelier Materi
Essence
The person who chooses Burgundy Oud Atelier Materi is an Alchemist-one who transmutes the raw materials of life into something richer, deeper, and more intoxicating. Like the fragrance itself, they are a paradox: warm yet mysterious, opulent yet grounded, ancient yet modern. The Alchemist does not merely exist in the world; they seek to transform it, to distill experience into meaning, and to cloak the mundane in the sacred.
Oud, with its smoky, resinous depth, speaks of time and patience-of something precious forged under pressure. The burgundy hue suggests richness, a life lived with intensity. This is not a person who drifts; they choose their path with deliberation, savoring the weight of their decisions.
Style & Aesthetic
Their aesthetic is one of controlled decadence-dark velvets, aged leather, the glint of brass or oxidized silver. They prefer textures that tell a story, objects that have witnessed time. Their home is a sanctuary of curated beauty: a well-worn Persian rug, a shelf of leather-bound books, a single candle flickering in a dim corner. They do not chase trends but cultivate an atmosphere that feels both timeless and deeply personal.
In taste, they favor the bitter and the complex-black coffee, dark chocolate, a peaty Scotch. They are drawn to art that demands interpretation: a Bergman film, a Mahler symphony, a Caravaggio painting where light struggles against shadow. Their philosophy is not one of simple optimism or nihilism but of alchemical realism-they believe in the possibility of transformation, but only through fire, only through effort.
Philosophy & Values
The Alchemist values depth over breadth. They have few friends, but those they keep are bound by unspoken understanding. Their love is not effusive but profound-a slow-burning intensity rather than a fleeting spark. They are the confidant who listens in silence, the lover who speaks through touch rather than words.
Yet this very depth can become a cage. Their relationships are often tests of endurance-do others have the patience to unravel their layers? Do they themselves have the patience to be known? They may withdraw when others seek simplicity, retreating into their inner sanctum where complexity is not a burden but a refuge.
Shadow
The Alchemist’s greatest strength-their ability to transmute experience into meaning-can also be their undoing. They risk becoming lost in their own labyrinth, mistaking introspection for action, brooding for wisdom. Their love of depth can curdle into isolation, their appreciation of the arcane into elitism.
At their worst, they may disdain what is simple or joyful, seeing it as naïve. They might hoard their insights like a miser, believing others unworthy of their truths. The very richness of their inner world can make the outer one seem pale by comparison-a dangerous illusion, for even the Alchemist must breathe the common air.
Conclusion
They are not a static figure but one engaged in perpetual refinement. Some days, they succeed in turning lead into gold-creating beauty from chaos, offering wisdom where others see only noise. Other days, they are trapped in the retort, choking on their own fumes.
But this is the Alchemist’s journey: to burn, to distill, to rise again. And when they wear Burgundy Oud, it is not merely a scent-it is an invocation, a reminder that they, too, are something rare, something forged in time.