Tribu Benetton
Fragrance Story
Tribu by Benetton is a Floral fragrance for women. Tribu was launched in 1993. The nose behind this fragrance is Bernard Ellena. Top notes are Black Currant, Italian Mandarin and Violet Leaf; middle notes are Chamomile, Moroccan Jasmine, Ylang-Ylang, Geranium and Bulgarian Rose; base notes are Oakmoss, Tahitian Vetiver, Benzoin and Sandalwood.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Bernard Ellena
Bernard Ellena has created fragrances for a wide range of brands, including Beloved Woman for Amouage, Simply Her for Avon, Colors De Benetton and Tribu for Benetton, Eau De Paradis and L'eau By Vanessa Bruno for Biotherm, Madeleine for Brocard, and About Men for Bruno Banani. His portfolio demonstrates versatility across floral, fresh, and woody genres. Ellena's compositions are known for their clarity and elegant simplicity.
Fragrance Notes
Tribu Benetton by Benetton 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.
Tribu Benetton embodies the distinctive style of Benetton while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Tribu Benetton
Essence
The person who chooses Tribu Benetton as their signature scent is, at their core, an Explorer-one of Jung’s fundamental archetypes representing the restless seeker, the wanderer of both external landscapes and inner worlds. This fragrance, with its bold, earthy warmth and untamed spirit, mirrors their essence: a soul drawn to the raw, the unrefined, the uncharted. They are not content with the well-trodden path; they crave the scent of adventure, the thrill of the unknown.
Style & Aesthetic
Their aesthetic is a paradox-bohemian yet deliberate, rugged yet refined. They favor natural textures: worn leather, linen that wrinkles with movement, jewelry that carries the marks of time. Their wardrobe is not curated for trends but for stories-each piece a relic of some past journey. They might wear a vintage denim jacket over a flowing dress, or a pair of battered boots with an otherwise polished outfit.
In music, they gravitate toward the organic-folk with rough edges, blues that ache, world music that carries the dust of distant lands. Their taste in art leans toward the primal: abstract expressionism, tribal motifs, anything that feels alive rather than meticulously composed.
They thrive in environments that allow for spontaneity-freelance work, travel-based careers, or creative fields where routine is the enemy. They might be a photographer documenting remote cultures, a writer collecting stories in transient spaces, or a musician whose home is the road.
Yet, this lifestyle has its costs. Without roots, they may struggle with belonging. Their independence can become isolation. The very freedom they cherish may, in time, leave them feeling untethered, longing for something they cannot name.
Philosophy & Values
They believe in freedom above all else-not as mere rebellion, but as a sacred principle. Rules are suggestions, traditions are curiosities to be examined, and conformity is a slow death. Their philosophy is one of direct experience: they trust only what they have lived, touched, tasted.
Yet, this love of freedom is not without its shadow. Their relentless pursuit of novelty can make them restless, unable to settle into depth. They may mistake movement for growth, confusing the accumulation of experiences with true wisdom.
Relationships
In love and friendship, they are magnetic but elusive. They draw people in with their passion, their stories, their refusal to be tamed-but just as quickly, they may vanish, chasing the next horizon. Their relationships are often marked by intensity without permanence.
They are not cruel; they simply fear stagnation. The moment a bond begins to feel like a cage, they grow uneasy. Their shadow here is emotional transience-they may leave behind a trail of admirers who never quite understood why they couldn’t stay.
Shadow
Their greatest flaw is avoidance disguised as adventure. They may mistake motion for meaning, believing that if they keep moving, they will never have to face the deeper questions-what they truly want, who they are beneath the stories.
But when they pause, when they allow themselves stillness, they discover something profound: that freedom is not just in the leaving, but sometimes in the staying.
Conclusion
The lover of Tribu Benetton is a soul in motion, intoxicated by the scent of the wild, the untamed, the unexplored. They are the Explorer in its purest form-driven by curiosity, haunted by the unknown. Their life is a dance between wanderlust and wisdom, between the hunger for more and the quiet realization that some answers are found not in the next horizon, but in the depths of the one they already stand upon.
They are, in the end, a paradox-both free and searching for freedom, both lost and exactly where they need to be.