Slow World Chasing Scents
Fragrance Story
Slow World by Chasing Scents is a Aromatic fragrance for women and men. Slow World was launched in 2021. The nose behind this fragrance is Sandy Wong. Top note is Pu'er tea; middle notes are Malt, Dragon Blood Resin and Saffron; base notes are Vanilla Bean, Incense and Sandalwood.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Sandy Wong
Sandy Wong has developed a collection of five fragrances for Chasing Scents, each centered on tea-inspired themes. Private Teahouse, Rain Tea, and Slow World explore different interpretations of tea in perfumery. Tea Service and Weeping Rose further expand this concept with floral and contemplative nuances. Her work for Chasing Scents showcases a cohesive yet varied approach to scent storytelling.
Fragrance Notes
Slow World Chasing Scents by Chasing Scents offers a distinctive olfactory experience that stands out from other fragrances in its category.
Crafted with the finest ingredients and a blend of traditional and modern perfumery techniques, this fragrance represents the pinnacle of the perfumer's art.
Slow World Chasing Scents embodies the distinctive style of Chasing Scents while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Dreamer Who Lingers Archetype: Portrait of Slow World Chasing Scents
Essence
To wear Slow World by Chasing Scents is to embrace the liminal-the space between waking and dreaming, between presence and memory. This fragrance, with its smoky, resinous warmth, hints at a soul who does not rush through life but lingers in its quiet corners, savoring the intangible. The person who chooses this scent is not merely a wanderer but a collector of moments, one who sees time as something to be stretched, folded, and examined rather than consumed.
Above all, they are defined by the Mystic archetype-the seeker of hidden truths, the one who finds meaning in the unseen. They are drawn to the symbolic, the poetic, the spaces where logic blurs into intuition. The Mystic does not merely experience life; they interpret it, layering their reality with personal mythologies.
Yet, like all archetypes, the Mystic has its shadow. Where there is depth, there can also be evasion; where there is contemplation, there can be detachment. The lover of Slow World does not merely dwell in the in-between-they sometimes risk getting lost there.
Relationships
They are not quick to trust, but once they do, their loyalty is unwavering. Their friendships are few but profound, built on shared silences as much as shared words. Romantic partners must understand that they need solitude as much as connection-that love, for them, is not about possession but presence.
Yet their shadow emerges here: they can be elusive, retreating into their inner world when reality becomes too demanding. Their loved ones may sometimes feel like spectators to their introspection, waiting for them to fully arrive.
Shadow
The greatest danger for this person is not that they dream too much, but that they may begin to prefer dreams to reality. Their introspection, when unbalanced, can become a form of avoidance. They might romanticize melancholy, mistaking stagnation for depth. The world asks for action, and they hesitate-not out of fear, but out of a reluctance to disrupt their inner equilibrium.
Yet this is also their redemption: their ability to see more deeply than others means they bring meaning to the mundane. They remind those around them that life is not just something to be lived, but to be felt.
Conclusion
Their tastes are deliberate, tactile, and often nostalgic. They prefer worn leather-bound books to crisp new editions, the texture of aged paper under their fingers. Their home is filled with objects that carry stories-antique perfume bottles, dried flowers, faintly yellowed postcards from places they may never visit. They do not chase trends but curate an atmosphere, a sensory sanctuary where time moves at their own pace.
In style, they favor layers-soft knits, draped fabrics, muted earth tones that whisper rather than shout. There is an intentional unfinishedness to their appearance, as if they are always in the middle of becoming. They are not careless but considered, leaving just enough ambiguity to invite curiosity.
Philosophically, they reject the tyranny of productivity. To them, the modern obsession with speed and efficiency is a kind of violence against the soul. They believe in the sacredness of idleness, in the wisdom of stillness. Their values are rooted in depth over breadth-better to know one thing intimately than a thousand things superficially.