Zahira Bvlgari

For Women
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2015

At a glance

Is Zahira Bvlgari worth trying?

Zahira by Bvlgari is a Oriental Floral fragrance for women.

Best match
Evening, Special Occasion wear in Fall, Winter
Performance feel
Good longevity with Moderate sillage
Signature profile
warm spicy, yellow floral, cinnamon with Cinnamon, Ylang-Ylang, Benzoin

The first impression

Zahira by Bvlgari is a Oriental Floral fragrance for women. Zahira was launched in 2015. The nose behind this fragrance is Daniela Andrier. Top note is Cinnamon; middle note is Ylang-Ylang; base note is Benzoin.

What shapes the scent

warm spicy 100%
yellow floral 85%
cinnamon 70%
amber 60%
sweet 50%
woody 40%
vanilla 35%

The perfumer behind it

Daniela Andrier

Daniela Andrier

Daniela Andrier is a perfumer known for her work with Bottega Veneta, creating the Knot line and Parco Palladiano series. She also developed fragrances for Bvlgari, including Amarena and Ashlemah, and for 27 87 with #hashtag. Her style often blends floral, fruity, and woody notes with refined elegance.

Notes pyramid

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Cinnamon Cinnamon

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Ylang-Ylang Ylang-Ylang

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Benzoin Benzoin

The mood it creates

The Alchemist Archetype: Portrait of Zahira Bvlgari

Essence

Zahira is the fragrance of the Alchemist, a potion of cinnamon, ylang-ylang, and benzoin that transforms the ordinary into gold. They are the seekers of hidden truths, the ones who find magic in the mundane. Their presence is both comforting and enigmatic, like a flame in a darkened room.

This scent is for those who understand that beauty is a kind of science, precise and mysterious in equal measure. The spicy warmth suggests a laboratory where potions simmer, where every ingredient has a purpose and a power. They are the bridge between the earthly and the ethereal.

Style & Aesthetic

Their wardrobe is a mix of the practical and the poetic-lab coats draped over silk blouses, boots made for both cobblestones and cobwebbed libraries. They favor deep ambers and burnt oranges, colors that echo the substances they work with.

Their space is a cabinet of curiosities: glass vials labeled in elegant script, dried flowers pressed between pages, a desk cluttered with half-finished experiments. Light filters through stained glass, casting prismatic shadows on worn wood.

Philosophy & Values

They believe in the transformative power of attention. To them, the world is a text to be decoded, a puzzle to be solved. Patience is their virtue, curiosity their compass. They value knowledge not for its own sake but for its ability to heal and reveal.

For them, the sacred is in the details-the way cinnamon blooms in hot oil, the precise moment a tincture turns from clear to gold. They trust the wisdom of the senses, the intelligence of the body.

Relationships

They attract fellow seekers, though their partnerships are often intellectual as much as emotional. Lovers must respect their need for solitude, their late-night vigils over notebooks and alembics. Friends are chosen for their ability to wonder, to question.

Conversations with them are meandering and deep, punctuated by silences as they consider their words. They are slow to trust but unwavering once given. Their love language is the sharing of secrets, the gift of a rare ingredient.

Lifestyle

Their days are governed by rhythms rather than routines. Mornings might be spent in the garden harvesting herbs, afternoons in the quiet hum of distillation. They work best in the liminal hours, when the world is neither day nor night.

Rituals are precise: the grinding of spices with a mortar and pestle, the careful recording of observations in a leather-bound journal. They move through the world as both scientist and mystic, measuring and marveling.

Shadow

Their pursuit of perfection can become obsession, their curiosity a kind of greed. They risk losing themselves in the labyrinth of their own making, mistaking accumulation for understanding. The elixir they seek may already be in their hands.

There is also the danger of isolation, of becoming so engrossed in their work that they forget the world outside. Wisdom, they must remember, is meant to be shared.

Conclusion

Zahira is the scent of transformation, of the ordinary made extraordinary. It is for those who see the universe in a grain of resin, who find divinity in distillation. The fragrance lingers like a spell half-remembered, a promise of something just beyond reach.