Patchouli D’angkor Boucheron

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2019
Moderate
Sillage
Good
Longevity
Fall
Best Season
Casual
Best For

Fragrance Story

Patchouli d’Angkor by Boucheron is a Chypre Floral fragrance for women and men. Patchouli d’Angkor was launched in 2019. The nose behind this fragrance is Nathalie Lorson. Top notes are Pear and Bergamot; middle notes are Jasmine and Bourbon Pepper; base notes are Patchouli, Guaiac Wood and White Musk.

Composition Profile

woody 100%
white floral 85%
patchouli 70%
warm spicy 60%
fresh spicy 50%
musky 40%
fruity 35%
citrus 30%
powdery 25%
sweet 20%

About the Perfumer

Nathalie Lorson

Nathalie Lorson

Nathalie Lorson is a senior perfumer at Firmenich with a career spanning decades, known for iconic creations like Amouage Love Tuberose and Myths Woman. She has worked with brands such as 4711, ALTAIA, and Affinessence, crafting diverse scents from fresh colognes to rich florals. Her portfolio also includes compositions for Ajmal and the Amouage Library Collection, demonstrating mastery across genres.

Fragrance Notes

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Pear Pear
Bergamot Bergamot

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Jasmine Jasmine
Bourbon Pepper Bourbon Pepper

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Patchouli Patchouli
Guaiac Wood Guaiac Wood
White Musk White Musk

Character Profile

The Alchemist Archetype: Portrait of Patchouli D’angkor Boucheron

Essence

The Alchemist seeks transmutation, turning base elements into profound revelation through patience and fire. They dwell in liminal spaces where matter meets spirit, finding gold not in metal but in the transformative process itself. Patchouli D’angkor embodies this journey, opening with the bright volatility of pear and bergamot before settling into darker mysteries. The jasmine blooms like moonlight in temple shadows, while bourbon pepper adds the heat of the crucible. This is a fragrance of slow metamorphosis, where earthy patchouli and sacred guaiac wood represent the fixed and the volatile finally married in liquid form.

Style & Aesthetic

They favor textiles that carry history: raw silk, weathered linen, and dark velvet that improves with age rather than deteriorates. Their aesthetic draws from ancient apothecaries and botanical gardens, mixing architectural geometry with organic decay. Jewelry tends toward amber, uncut stones, and brass rather than polished gems. The crisp pear and citrus translate to structured white shirts softened by unstructured jackets, while the patchouli base demands earth tones - ochre, umber, and forest green. They appear as though they have just returned from cataloging rare manuscripts or distilling essences in a high-ceilinged atelier filled with copper vessels.

Philosophy & Values

For the Alchemist, nothing remains static; everything contains the seed of its opposite. They value patience as the highest virtue, understanding that true transformation requires sustained attention and the courage to endure decay. Waste is foreign to their nature, as they perceive potential in discarded things and wisdom in decomposition. The interplay of jasmine's purity with pepper's bite reflects their belief that contradiction fuels growth. They practice acceptance of shadow, knowing that the earthy funk of patchouli must precede rebirth. Their spirituality remains hands-on and experimental, rooted in tactile experience yet perpetually reaching toward the ineffable.

Relationships

They attract others through depth rather than surface charm, offering a presence that feels like sanctuary. In romance, they ignite slowly but burn with sustained intensity, like bourbon pepper warming gradually against the skin. They require partners who appreciate silence and transformation, who do not fear the dark places where authentic growth occurs. Socially, they maintain small circles of intense connection rather than wide networks of acquaintance. The white musk in the fragrance's dry-down suggests their tendency to leave a subtle, lingering presence rather than a loud announcement. They give gifts of pressed flowers, found objects, or handwritten observations - tangible evidence of their careful attention.

Lifestyle

Morning rituals involve measured movements: grinding spices, brewing tinctures, or arranging botanical specimens with meditative precision. They keep journals filled with sketches, pressed leaves, and notes on changing light. Their living spaces resemble laboratories of comfort, cluttered with old books, drying herbs, and plants in various stages of growth and decline. The casual nature of this scent suits their preference for unstructured days where work and contemplation intertwine. They might spend hours refining a single recipe or repairing a damaged object rather than seeking novelty. Evening finds them in dim light, the guaiac wood aspect rising to meet the smoke of incense or wood fires.

Shadow

Their obsession with transformation can devolve into stagnation disguised as process, endlessly grinding the same psychological materials without achieving the Great Work. They risk isolation, disappearing so deeply into interior laboratories that they forget to share their discoveries with the world. The patchouli's intensity, when unchecked by the brightness of pear, can tip into muddy heaviness; similarly, they may become so focused on shadow work that they neglect joy. Their refusal to accept things as they are sometimes manifests as chronic dissatisfaction, always seeking to change what might simply need acceptance. They must guard against the arrogance of believing they can perfect what is already whole.

Conclusion

Patchouli D’angkor captures the Alchemist's eternal project: the marriage of heaven and earth, the refinement of raw nature into spiritual gold. It is a scent for those who understand that beauty requires time to reveal itself, that the brightest fruit must fall and ferment to become immortal. Wearing it, they carry the atmosphere of ancient temples and modern laboratories, of soil and stars intertwined. It reminds them that they are themselves the prima materia, constantly dissolving and reconstituting into more authentic forms. In this fragrance, the search ends and begins again with each wearing, a closed loop of perpetual becoming.