Bubblegum Colornoise

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2019
Moderate
Sillage
Moderate
Longevity
Summer
Best Season
Casual
Best For

Fragrance Story

Bubblegum by Colornoise is a Floral Fruity Gourmand fragrance for women and men. Bubblegum was launched in 2019. The nose behind this fragrance is Krista.

Composition Profile

fruity 100%
sweet 85%
tropical 70%

About the Perfumer

Krista

Krista

Krista is the perfumer behind Colornoise, a brand known for playful, food-inspired fragrances. Her creations include Acai Bowl, Birthday Cake, Bubblegum, Cello, Cereal Milk, Chill, Chocolate Cereal Milk, and Country. Her work often evokes nostalgic, sweet, and comforting experiences.

Fragrance Notes

All Notes

Complete scent profile

Bubble Gum Bubble Gum
Sugar Sugar
Red Berries Red Berries
Unique Character

Bubblegum Colornoise by Colornoise 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

Bubblegum Colornoise embodies the distinctive style of Colornoise while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.

Character Profile

The Bubblegum Colornoise Enthu Archetype: Portrait of Bubblegum Colornoise

Essence

The person who adores Bubblegum Colornoise is most closely aligned with The Innocent-a Jungian archetype embodying purity, nostalgia, and an unshakable belief in joy. They are the dreamer who refuses to let the world harden them, the optimist who clings to sweetness like a life raft. The Innocent does not merely wear a scent; they inhabit it, allowing its sugary euphoria to shield them from cynicism. Yet, beneath the surface, their refusal to acknowledge life’s bitterness can become their undoing.

Style & Aesthetic

Their surroundings mirror their fragrance-playful, vibrant, unapologetically whimsical. Their wardrobe is a riot of color, favoring soft pinks, sky blues, and neon yellows, as if they stepped out of a Lisa Frank notebook. Their home is cluttered with trinkets: vintage toys, plush animals, fairy lights tangled like candy floss. They collect vinyl records of bubblegum pop and synthwave, soundtracks for a life lived in perpetual reverie.

They reject minimalism as sterile, preferring maximalist chaos-a rebellion against the gray pragmatism of adulthood. Their taste in art leans toward the surreal, the childlike, the unrefined. They adore Takashi Murakami’s grinning flowers and Yayoi Kusama’s infinite polka dots, seeing in them a defiance of seriousness.

They thrive in creative fields-illustration, music, event planning-where imagination is currency. A 9-to-5 office job would suffocate them; they need space to daydream. They might run a Etsy shop selling handmade jewelry or a YouTube channel dedicated to nostalgic cartoons.

Yet their aversion to structure can lead to chronic instability. Deadlines are missed, bills are paid late, responsibilities are shrugged off with a laugh. They live in the moment, but the moment does not always sustain them.

Philosophy & Values

Their guiding principle is simple: joy is resistance. They believe the world is too cruel to take seriously, so they choose delight as their armor. They are not naive-they have seen darkness-but they refuse to let it define them. Their optimism is a conscious act of defiance, a refusal to surrender to despair.

They value kindness above all else, but their version of kindness is often escapism in disguise. They avoid conflict, smoothing over disagreements with jokes or distractions. They believe that if everyone just lightened up, the world would be better-but this can make them passive in the face of real suffering.

Relationships

Friends adore them for their infectious energy. They are the one who plans themed parties, who sends absurd memes at 3 AM, who turns grocery shopping into a treasure hunt. They make people feel young again, if only for a moment.

But their relationships suffer from emotional evasion. They struggle with deep vulnerability, deflecting pain with humor or changing the subject. Romantic partners may feel starved of real intimacy, as if they are dating a mirage of cheer. Their love is effervescent but fleeting, like the scent of bubblegum-intoxicating, then gone.

Shadow

Their greatest weakness is their fear of depth. When life demands seriousness-grief, failure, accountability-they retreat into fantasy. Their optimism, once a strength, becomes a prison. They may spiral when forced to confront harsh truths, collapsing into sudden melancholy.

They are also prone to emotional manipulation, not out of malice but desperation. If someone threatens their bubble of joy, they may guilt-trip them ("Why are you being so negative?") or disappear entirely. Their light is real, but it casts long shadows.

Conclusion

The Bubblegum Colornoise lover is a paradox-both resilient and fragile, a beacon of joy and a master of avoidance. Their scent is more than a preference; it is a manifesto. They remind us that wonder is worth preserving, but they also warn us: too much sugar rots the teeth. The world needs their light, but they must learn to face the dark-or risk dissolving into it.