Via Camerelle Profumo Carthusia

For Women
Eau de Parfum
Year: Unknown
Moderate
Sillage
Good
Longevity
Summer
Best Season
Evening
Best For

Fragrance Story

Via Camerelle Profumo by Carthusia is a fragrance for women. Top notes are Bergamot, Lemon, Marjoram and Orange; middle notes are Cyclamen, Jasmine and Water Lily; base notes are Algae, Ambergris, White Musk and Cedar.

Composition Profile

citrus 100%
fresh spicy 85%
aromatic 70%
floral 60%
herbal 50%
aquatic 40%
fresh 35%
marine 30%
amber 25%
white floral 20%

About the Perfumer

Unknown Perfumer

Fragrance Notes

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Bergamot Bergamot
Lemon Lemon
Marjoram Marjoram
Orange Orange

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Cyclamen Cyclamen
Jasmine Jasmine
Water Lily Water Lily

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Algae Algae
Ambergris Ambergris
White Musk White Musk
Cedar Cedar
Unique Character

Via Camerelle Profumo Carthusia by Carthusia 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

Via Camerelle Profumo Carthusia embodies the distinctive style of Carthusia while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.

Character Profile

The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Via Camerelle Profumo Carthusia

Essence

The one who chooses Via Camerelle Profumo Carthusia is a creature of refined sensuality, drawn to the interplay of light and shadow in both fragrance and life. This scent-citrusy yet floral, fresh yet intoxicating-mirrors their own duality: a soul that thrives on beauty, connection, and the subtle art of seduction. They are, at their core, the Lover archetype, embodying passion, aesthetic devotion, and a deep yearning for meaningful experiences.

They do not merely wear a fragrance; they inhabit it, allowing it to become an extension of their presence. The bergamot and orange blossom speak of Mediterranean warmth, of sun-drenched terraces where time slows, where every moment is an invitation to savor. This is a person who understands that life is not just to be lived, but to be felt-deeply, exquisitely.

Style & Aesthetic

Their tastes are deliberate, curated with an artist’s eye. They prefer the tactile richness of linen and silk, the weight of well-bound books, the muted glow of candlelight over harsh fluorescents. Their home is a sanctuary of understated elegance-antique ceramics, a single stem of white peonies in a slender vase, the faintest trace of their perfume lingering in the air.

In philosophy, they are Epicureans of a sort, though not in the vulgar sense of indulgence. Rather, they seek the sublime in the everyday-the perfect espresso, the way light filters through leaves, the quiet intimacy of a shared glance. They believe in the transformative power of beauty, and they cultivate it with quiet discipline.

Relationships

To know them is to be drawn into a world of subtle allure. They are neither overtly flirtatious nor crudely seductive; their charm lies in suggestion, in the spaces between words. They are the kind of person who remembers how you take your tea, who touches your wrist lightly when making a point, who makes even a casual conversation feel like a secret shared.

Yet this very magnetism has its shadow. Their need for connection can tip into possessiveness, their idealism into disappointment when others fail to match their intensity. They may mistake infatuation for love, or worse-cling to a fading romance out of fear that nothing else will ever feel as intoxicating. The Lover’s greatest weakness is the illusion that passion alone can sustain meaning.

Shadow

For all their grace, they are not immune to vanity. The same eye that appreciates fine details can become overly critical-of themselves, of others, of relationships that lack the perfection they crave. There is a quiet melancholy beneath their charm, a fear that one day, the world will no longer stir them as it once did.

At their worst, they may retreat into hedonism, chasing sensation after sensation, never satisfied. Or they may grow cynical, dismissing deeper connections as illusions, armor against the vulnerability that true intimacy demands. The Lover, when unbalanced, risks becoming either the jaded aesthete or the perpetual dreamer, always longing, never arriving.

Conclusion

Their redemption lies in learning that beauty is not just in the fleeting ecstasy, but in the enduring. That love is not just the first rush of citrus on the skin, but the deeper, woody warmth that lingers. If they can embrace imperfection-in life, in others, in themselves-they will find that the world offers not less, but infinitely more than they had imagined.

And so they continue, a figure of quiet allure, leaving traces of Via Camerelle in their wake-a reminder that to live sensuously is to live fully, but to love wisely is to live deeply.