The Fir Tree Cb I Hate Perfume

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2004

At a glance

Is The Fir Tree Cb I Hate Perfume worth trying?

The Fir Tree by CB I Hate Perfume is a Woody Aromatic fragrance for women and men.

Best match
Casual wear in Winter
Performance feel
Moderate longevity with Moderate sillage
Signature profile
woody, fresh spicy, aromatic with Fir, Soil Tincture

The first impression

The Fir Tree by CB I Hate Perfume is a Woody Aromatic fragrance for women and men. The Fir Tree was launched in 2004. The nose behind this fragrance is Christopher Brosius.

What shapes the scent

woody 100%
fresh spicy 85%
aromatic 70%
conifer 60%
fresh 50%
earthy 40%
balsamic 35%
sweet 30%

The perfumer behind it

Christopher Brosius

Christopher Brosius

Christopher Brosius is an American perfumer and founder of CB I Hate Perfume, known for his unconventional, narrative-driven scents. His portfolio includes fragrances like 2nd Cumming, At the Beach 1966, and Beautiful Launderette, which evoke specific memories and atmospheres. He also created Cumming for actor Alan Cumming, blending personal storytelling with olfactory art.

Notes pyramid

All Notes

Complete scent profile

Fir Fir
Soil Tincture Soil Tincture

The mood it creates

The Wanderer Archetype: Portrait of The Fir Tree Cb I Hate Perfume

Essence

The Wanderer is called by distant horizons and the solace of solitude. The Fir Tree captures this restless spirit with its balsamic evergreen and soil tincture-a scent that conjures frostbitten mornings and endless pine barrens. It’s the olfactory equivalent of a well-worn trail map, creased from use.

Style & Aesthetic

They layer wool and waxed canvas, clothes that withstand miles and weather. Their boots are scuffed but reliable; their scarf smells faintly of campfire smoke. A single silver compass hangs around their neck, though they navigate more by instinct than direction.

Philosophy & Values

They measure wealth in experiences, not possessions. The Wanderer believes roots can be carried-like fir needles in a pocket-and that home is wherever the stars are clear overhead. Motion is their meditation, the rhythm of footsteps on packed earth.

Relationships

They connect deeply but briefly, leaving echoes like footsteps in snow. Friends receive postcards from remote outposts; lovers learn to cherish the time between departures. Their truest companion is the horizon, always receding but never judgmental.

Lifestyle

They work seasonal jobs-forest ranger, ski instructor, cargo ship cook-always with an exit strategy. Their apartment, if they have one, is spartan: a wall pinned with train tickets, a shelf of field guides, a kettle for tea brewed strong and bitter.

Shadow

Their independence can curdle into rootlessness, mistaking movement for purpose. The Wanderer risks becoming a ghost, so accustomed to leaving that they forget how to stay, their presence as fleeting as the scent of fir on a winter wind.

Conclusion

The Fir Tree is a breath of alpine air, sharp and clarifying. Like the Wanderer, it resists domestication-a fragrance for those who find comfort in the untamed, where the only certainty is the next step forward.