Báinín Cloon Keen Atelier

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2024

At a glance

Is Báinín Cloon Keen Atelier worth trying?

Báinín by Cloon Keen Atelier is a Chypre Floral fragrance for women and men.

Best match
Casual wear in Spring
Performance feel
Good longevity with Moderate sillage
Signature profile
aromatic, citrus, yellow floral with Neroli, Thyme, Bergamot

The first impression

Báinín by Cloon Keen Atelier is a Chypre Floral fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Báinín was launched in 2024. Top notes are Neroli, Thyme, Bergamot, Lemon, Clary Sage, Mandarin Orange and Peppermint; middle notes are Broom, Wool, Jasmine Sambac, Violet, Pear and Black Currant; base notes are Musk, Sandal, Cedarwood and Coumarin.

What shapes the scent

aromatic 100%
citrus 85%
yellow floral 70%
woody 60%
musky 50%
powdery 40%
sweet 35%
fresh spicy 30%
white floral 25%
fresh 20%

The perfumer behind it

Margaret Mangan

Margaret Mangan

Margaret Mangan is a perfumer known for her work with Cloon Keen Atelier, including the fragrance Báinín. Her style often embraces clean, minimalist compositions with a poetic sensibility. She has a talent for highlighting subtle, naturalistic accords. Her fragrances feel intimate and thoughtfully crafted.

Notes pyramid

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Neroli Neroli
Thyme Thyme
Bergamot Bergamot
Lemon Lemon
Clary Sage Clary Sage
Mandarin Orange Mandarin Orange
Peppermint Peppermint

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Broom Broom
Wool Wool
Jasmine Sambac Jasmine Sambac
Violet Violet
Pear Pear
Black Currant Black Currant

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Musk Musk
Sandal Sandal
Cedarwood Cedarwood
Coumarin Coumarin

The mood it creates

The Weaver Of Silence Archetype: Portrait of Báinín Cloon Keen Atelier

Essence

The person who favors Báinín by Cloon Keen Atelier is most closely aligned with the Sage-a seeker of truth, a quiet observer who distills wisdom from the subtleties of life. The fragrance itself, with its clean linen, salt, and musk, evokes an almost monastic purity, a scent that does not impose but lingers like an unspoken thought. The Sage does not clamor for attention; they are drawn to the spaces between words, the pauses in conversations, the moments where meaning is felt rather than declared.

This person is not merely intellectual but deeply contemplative, valuing clarity and precision in all things. They are the one who listens more than they speak, who absorbs the world before forming an opinion. Their wisdom is not loud, but it is undeniable-like the scent of freshly laundered linen, it is both simple and profound.

Relationships

They do not collect friends; they cultivate them slowly, with the care of a gardener tending a single, fragile bloom. Their relationships are built on mutual understanding rather than forced intimacy. They are the confidant, the one who hears secrets not because they ask for them, but because others sense they will hold them without judgment.

Romantically, they are drawn to those who appreciate silence as much as speech. They do not love loudly, but their love is steady, like the tide-always present, even when it recedes. Their partner must understand that their solitude is not rejection but a necessary retreat, the way a monk returns to his cell to pray.

Shadow

Yet the Sage’s greatest strength is also their greatest flaw. Their love of silence can become a fortress, their introspection a form of withdrawal. They may mistake solitude for wisdom, forgetting that some truths are only found in the messiness of human connection. At their worst, they grow detached, observing life as if through glass-present but untouched.

They may also struggle with perfectionism, dismissing anything that does not meet their exacting standards. Their pursuit of purity can become a rejection of life’s inherent chaos, leaving them brittle, even disdainful, of those who embrace spontaneity.

Conclusion

Their tastes are deliberate, almost ascetic in their restraint. They prefer neutral tones-soft whites, muted grays, the occasional deep blue-as if their external world must mirror their internal stillness. Their home is uncluttered, filled with well-worn books, handmade ceramics, and perhaps a single vase of dried grasses. They are drawn to textures that reward patience: raw linen, unpolished wood, cold stone.

Philosophically, they reject excess. They believe in the elegance of necessity, in the idea that truth is found in reduction rather than accumulation. They might quote Marcus Aurelius or Simone Weil, but never pretentiously-only when the words align perfectly with their own silent convictions.