Comme Des Garcons Series 5 Sherbet: Rhubarb Comme Des Garcons
Fragrance Story
Comme des Garcons Series 5 Sherbet: Rhubarb by Comme des Garcons is a Floral Green fragrance for women and men. Comme des Garcons Series 5 Sherbet: Rhubarb was launched in 2003. The nose behind this fragrance is Bertrand Duchaufour. Top notes are Rhubarb, Litchi and Bergamot; middle notes are Camelia and Orchid; base notes are Vanilla and Oak Tree.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Bertrand Duchaufour
Bertrand Duchaufour is a renowned French perfumer with a prolific career spanning many brands. He has created fragrances for Acqua di Parma, including Blu Mediterraneo - Cipresso Di Toscana and Colonia Assoluta, as well as for Aedes de Venustas, such as Café Tabac and Copal Azur. His style is known for its complexity and use of natural ingredients.
Fragrance Notes
Comme Des Garcons Series 5 Sherbet: Rhubarb Comme Des Garcons by Comme des Garcons 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.
Comme Des Garcons Series 5 Sherbet: Rhubarb Comme Des Garcons embodies the distinctive style of Comme des Garcons while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Alchemist Archetype: Portrait of Comme Des Garcons Series 5 Sherbet: Rhubarb Comme Des Garcons
Essence
Their presence is an experiment-a deliberate collision of contradictions. The scent they wear, Comme Des Garçons Series 5 Sherbet: Rhubarb, is not a fragrance for those who seek comfort in the familiar. It is tart, vegetal, almost medicinal, yet playfully effervescent, like a laboratory experiment that somehow yields something beautiful. This person is not merely a wearer of scents but a curator of sensations, an alchemist who transforms the mundane into the extraordinary.
They embody the Alchemist-the archetype of transformation, curiosity, and the relentless pursuit of reinvention. Like the medieval seekers of the philosopher’s stone, they believe in the transmutation of the ordinary into gold, whether through art, thought, or experience. Their life is a series of controlled reactions, each choice a measured attempt to distill meaning from chaos.
Style & Aesthetic
Their tastes are neither conventional nor purely avant-garde, but rather a calculated dissonance. They might pair a vintage leather jacket with a deconstructed linen shirt, or decorate their living space with brutalist concrete accents softened by a single, absurdly vibrant neon sign. Music is an eclectic mix-perhaps the structured chaos of Aphex Twin alongside the melancholic precision of Erik Satie.
Food is not merely sustenance but an exploration-fermented, spiced, or deliberately understated. They savor the bitterness of dark chocolate and the astringency of black coffee, not out of pretension, but because they find beauty in the edges of sensation.
Their daily life is a series of small rebellions against routine. They may work in a creative field-design, experimental art, or even a scientific discipline-where their need for reinvention is an asset. If trapped in a conventional job, they subvert it subtly, turning mundane tasks into personal challenges.
They travel not to relax but to disrupt their own perspective. A week in Berlin’s underground clubs or a solitary hike through a volcanic landscape appeals more than a resort. Their home is a sanctuary of controlled chaos-books stacked in precarious towers, a single perfect orchid in a concrete pot, a record player that only plays vinyl with minor imperfections.
Philosophy & Values
They reject dogma but are not nihilistic. Their philosophy is one of controlled rebellion-a belief that truth is found not in absolutes but in the tension between opposites. They value intelligence but distrust arrogance; they admire passion but despise sentimentality.
For them, authenticity is not about "being oneself" in a static sense, but about the courage to evolve. They are drawn to thinkers who dismantle and rebuild-Nietzsche, Baudrillard, Donna Haraway-those who treat ideas as mutable compounds rather than rigid structures.
Relationships
In relationships, they are neither the clingy romantic nor the detached cynic. They attract those who are intrigued by their enigmatic nature but may frustrate those who crave predictability. Their love is a chemical reaction-intense, transformative, sometimes volatile. They do not seek to complete others, but to react with them, creating something new in the process.
Friendships are curated, not collected. They have little patience for small talk, preferring conversations that spiral into uncharted territories. Their presence can be electrifying or exhausting, depending on whether one enjoys the friction of their intellect.
Shadow
The Alchemist’s brilliance has its dark counterpart. Their relentless pursuit of novelty can become a form of avoidance-an unwillingness to sit with stillness, to accept that not everything must be transformed. They may grow impatient with those who cannot keep up with their intellectual or aesthetic velocity, dismissing them as "uninteresting" rather than seeking depth in simplicity.
At their worst, they become the failed experiment-a person so obsessed with reinvention that they lose any sense of continuity. Relationships burn out like short-lived chemical reactions, and their search for the next transformative experience leaves them perpetually unsatisfied.
Conclusion
They are neither wholly light nor shadow, but a shifting balance of both. The scent of rhubarb-sharp, unexpected, strangely addictive-mirrors their essence. They do not wear fragrance to be liked, but to provoke, to intrigue, to announce their presence as a question rather than an answer.
To know them is to engage in an endless experiment, one where the outcome is never certain, but the process is always electrifying. They are the Alchemist-forever distilling life into something richer, stranger, and more alive.