C Green Floral With Scottish Heather Clive Christian

For Women
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2017
Moderate
Sillage
Moderate
Longevity
Spring, Summer
Best Season
Casual
Best For

Fragrance Story

C for Women Green Floral With Scottish Heather by Clive Christian is a Floral Green fragrance for women. C for Women Green Floral With Scottish Heather was launched in 2017. The nose behind this fragrance is Beverley Bayne. Top notes are Chamomile, Apple, Bergamot and Pear; middle note is Rose; base notes are Green Grass and Dew Drop.

Composition Profile

green 100%
fresh 85%
fruity 70%
rose 60%
herbal 50%
floral 40%
aquatic 35%
fresh spicy 30%
citrus 25%
aromatic 20%

About the Perfumer

Beverley Bayne

Beverley Bayne

Beverley Bayne is a perfumer with a diverse portfolio including Accessorize's Lovelily, Aether's Ultrae, and Agent Provocateur's Blue Silk. She has also created fragrances for Anima Vinci, Bella Freud, and Clive Christian, such as 1872 Mandarin and Amber Absolute Oil. Her work spans both niche and luxury markets, often featuring rich, complex blends.

Fragrance Notes

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Chamomile Chamomile
Apple Apple
Bergamot Bergamot
Pear Pear

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Rose Rose

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Green Grass Green Grass
Dew Drop Dew Drop

Character Profile

The Lover Archetype: Portrait of C Green Floral With Scottish Heather Clive Christian

Essence

This person is most closely aligned with the Enchantress, a variation of the Lover archetype. The Enchantress is not merely seductive in the carnal sense but possesses a magnetic allure rooted in mystery, refinement, and an almost poetic appreciation for beauty. They draw others in not through overt manipulation but through an effortless charm, an aesthetic sensibility that makes the world around them seem richer, more vivid.

C Green Floral With Scottish Heather-a fragrance that balances crisp green freshness with the wild, earthy romance of heather-mirrors their essence. It is elegant yet untamed, polished yet evocative of misty moors and untrodden paths. Like the scent, they embody a paradox: both cultivated and free, sophisticated yet deeply connected to nature’s raw beauty.

Style & Aesthetic

Their life is a carefully composed yet spontaneous composition. They surround themselves with objects of understated luxury-antique books with gilded edges, hand-thrown ceramics glazed in muted greens, linen drapes that catch the light like morning mist. Their home is not ostentatious but layered, each piece telling a story. They prefer the patina of age to sterile perfection, finding beauty in the worn edges of a leather-bound journal or the irregular veins of marble.

In dress, they favor textures that whisper rather than shout: cashmere that feels like a second skin, silk scarves that drift like smoke, tailored coats that suggest rather than impose. Their palette is drawn from nature-deep moss, slate gray, the faint blush of heather at dusk. They move through the world with a quiet confidence, leaving traces of their presence like the lingering trail of their perfume.

Philosophy & Values

They reject the vulgarity of excess, believing that true luxury lies in restraint. Their philosophy is one of aesthetic hedonism-not indulgence for its own sake, but the careful cultivation of pleasure in its most refined forms. A perfectly brewed cup of tea, the weight of a well-made pen in hand, the silence of an early morning walk-these are their sacraments.

They value authenticity, but not in the crude, confessional sense. For them, authenticity is an art-an ability to reveal just enough to intrigue, never so much as to dispel the mystery. They despise the transactional nature of modern relationships, preferring connections that unfold slowly, like the layers of their fragrance.

Relationships

They are neither recluse nor socialite, but a selective curator of souls. Their circle is small but profound, composed of those who appreciate nuance, who understand that silence can be more intimate than speech. Romantic partners are drawn to them like moths to a flame, lured by the promise of depth-but they are not easily possessed.

Their love is a gift bestowed, not a right claimed. They demand intellectual and emotional engagement, and they will withdraw if they sense superficiality. Yet this very idealism can become their shadow-their reluctance to settle, to accept human flaws, can leave them isolated in their own exquisite world.

Shadow

For all their grace, they risk becoming prisoners of their own refinement. Their disdain for the mundane can border on elitism, their love of beauty hardening into intolerance for anything less. They may grow impatient with those who cannot match their aesthetic or emotional depth, dismissing them as coarse or unworthy.

Their enchantment can also turn inward, becoming self-absorption. The same allure that draws others in can become a shield, keeping them at a remove. They may mistake admiration for love, surrounding themselves with devotees but never truly letting anyone in.

Conclusion

To evolve, they must learn that true beauty is not only in the perfectly composed but in the imperfectly real. The wild heather in their fragrance is a reminder-nature is not manicured, yet it is breathtaking. If they can embrace this truth, they will not merely enchant but truly connect, not just admire life but live it.

They are, at their best, a reminder that the world is richer when seen through eyes that seek the sublime in the subtle. At their worst, they are a caution-that even the most exquisite perfume can fade if never shared.