Bvlgari Rose Essentielle Eau De Toilette Rosee Bvlgari

For Women
Eau de Toilette
Year: 2007
Moderate
Sillage
Moderate
Longevity
Spring
Best Season
Office
Best For

Fragrance Story

Bvlgari Rose Essentielle Eau De Toilette Rosee by Bvlgari is a Floral fragrance for women. Bvlgari Rose Essentielle Eau De Toilette Rosee was launched in 2007. The nose behind this fragrance is Beatrice Piquet. Top notes are Bergamot and Orange; middle notes are Rose and Jasmine; base notes are Musk and Patchouli.

Composition Profile

rose 100%
citrus 85%
musky 70%
floral 60%
white floral 50%
powdery 40%
patchouli 35%
fresh spicy 30%

About the Perfumer

Beatrice Piquet

Beatrice Piquet

Beatrice Piquet is a French perfumer who has worked with major houses including Givaudan. Her style often balances fresh, floral, and woody elements with a clean, modern sensibility. She created fragrances such as Bvlgari Rose Essentielle and Burberry The Beat, known for their refined and wearable compositions.

Fragrance Notes

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Bergamot Bergamot
Orange Orange

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Rose Rose
Jasmine Jasmine

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Musk Musk
Patchouli Patchouli
Unique Character

Bvlgari Rose Essentielle Eau De Toilette Rosee Bvlgari by Bvlgari offers a distinctive olfactory experience that stands out from other fragrances in its category.

Artisanal Creation

Crafted with the finest ingredients and a blend of traditional and modern perfumery techniques, this fragrance represents the pinnacle of the perfumer's art.

Signature Style

Bvlgari Rose Essentielle Eau De Toilette Rosee Bvlgari embodies the distinctive style of Bvlgari while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.

Character Profile

The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Bvlgari Rose Essentielle Eau De Toilette Rosee Bvlgari

Essence

The one who cherishes Bvlgari Rose Essentielle is most closely aligned with The Lover archetype-a soul drawn to beauty, passion, and deep emotional resonance. The Lover does not merely exist; they feel, with an intensity that colors every experience. This fragrance, with its delicate yet intoxicating blend of rose, violet, and blackcurrant, mirrors their essence: romantic, refined, and suffused with a quiet sensuality.

Yet, like all archetypes, The Lover has a shadow-a tendency toward indulgence, idealization, and at times, an unwillingness to face the harsher truths of life. They may cling to beauty as a shield against the mundane or the painful, risking disillusionment when reality fails to match their dreams.

To wear Bvlgari Rose Essentielle is to declare a quiet allegiance to the heart’s deepest longings. They are not loud, nor do they seek to dominate. But in their presence, one feels the weight of their emotion-the way a single rose, left on a windowsill, can fill a room with its fragrance.

They are the poets, the dreamers, the ones who still believe in love letters and slow dances. And though the world may sometimes disappoint them, they refuse to stop believing in its beauty. For them, to cease loving would be to cease living-and that is a fate far worse than any heartbreak.

Relationships

They do not love lightly. When they give their heart, it is with a quiet intensity that can be overwhelming to those unprepared for such depth. Their friendships are few but lifelong, built on shared silences as much as shared words. Romantic partners must understand their need for both passion and tenderness-a lover who can appreciate the slow unfurling of emotion, like the petals of a rose.

Yet here, the shadow emerges. Their idealism can blind them to flaws in others, leading to disappointment when reality intrudes. They may linger too long in fading relationships, mistaking nostalgia for love. And when hurt, they retreat-not in anger, but in sorrow, as if the world has betrayed some unspoken promise.

Shadow

The Lover’s greatest strength-their capacity for deep feeling-can also be their undoing. They may struggle with periods of melancholy when life feels too stark, too unadorned. Their aversion to conflict can make them passive in the face of necessary confrontation. And their pursuit of the sublime can, at times, leave them restless, always searching for a perfection that does not exist.

Yet even in their flaws, there is grace. Their sensitivity, though sometimes a burden, allows them to perceive subtleties others miss. Their idealism, though occasionally impractical, keeps them from becoming jaded. And when they learn to embrace life’s imperfections-to love the cracked vase as much as the flawless bloom-they find a deeper, more enduring kind of beauty.

Conclusion

Their world is one of curated elegance. They are drawn to soft textures-cashmere, silk, linen-clothing that drapes rather than constricts. Their home is a sanctuary of muted tones, fresh flowers, and well-worn books of poetry. They prefer handwritten letters to hasty texts, candlelit dinners to loud gatherings.

Their taste in art leans toward the impressionists-Monet’s water lilies, Renoir’s soft-focus figures-where emotion blurs into form. Music, too, is an intimate affair: Chopin’s nocturnes, the melancholic warmth of Norah Jones, the whispered confessions of Leonard Cohen. They do not merely listen; they absorb, as if sound could seep into their bones.

Philosophically, they believe in the transformative power of love-not just romantic love, but love as an animating force in all things. They see beauty as a kind of truth, and truth as something felt rather than dissected. They are not naive, but they resist cynicism, preferring to believe in the possibility of transcendence through connection.