Signature Story For Him David Beckham

For Men
Eau de Toilette
Year: 2009
Moderate
Sillage
Moderate
Longevity
Spring
Best Season
Casual
Best For

Fragrance Story

Signature Story for Him by David Beckham is a fragrance for men. Signature Story for Him was launched in 2009. Signature Story for Him was created by Beatrice Piquet and Celine Barel. Top notes are Pineapple, Violet Leaf and Basil; middle notes are Lavender, African Orange Flower and Rosemary; base notes are Incense, Patchouli and Virginia Cedar.

Composition Profile

aromatic 100%
amber 85%
lavender 70%
smoky 60%
fresh spicy 50%
woody 40%
sweet 35%
balsamic 30%
white floral 25%
warm spicy 20%

About the Perfumer

Beatrice Piquet

Beatrice Piquet

Beatrice Piquet is a French perfumer who has worked with major houses including Givaudan. Her style often balances fresh, floral, and woody elements with a clean, modern sensibility. She created fragrances such as Bvlgari Rose Essentielle and Burberry The Beat, known for their refined and wearable compositions.

Fragrance Notes

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Pineapple Pineapple
Violet Leaf Violet Leaf
Basil Basil

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Lavender Lavender
African Orange Flower African Orange Flower
Rosemary Rosemary

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Incense Incense
Patchouli Patchouli
Virginia Cedar Virginia Cedar

Character Profile

The Explorer Archetype: Portrait of Signature Story For Him David Beckham

Essence

The person who gravitates toward Signature Story For Him by David Beckham is, at their core, an Explorer-a seeker of experience, a wanderer between worlds. This archetype thrives on novelty, independence, and the thrill of the unknown. Like the fragrance itself-fresh, woody, subtly adventurous-they embody a spirit that resists stagnation. They are not the revolutionary nor the ruler, but the one who moves through life with curiosity, always testing boundaries without fully breaking them.

Style & Aesthetic

Their aesthetic is effortlessly dynamic-a blend of casual sophistication with an edge of ruggedness. They favor clothes that transition seamlessly from day to night, from city streets to coastal escapes. Leather jackets, well-worn boots, crisp but relaxed shirts-each piece tells a story of movement.

Their tastes in music, books, and art reflect the same duality: they appreciate the raw energy of rock, the introspection of travel literature, the bold strokes of abstract expressionism. They are drawn to stories of wanderers-Kerouac’s On the Road, Hesse’s Siddhartha-because they see themselves in those narratives.

Philosophy & Values

Their philosophy is one of motion over permanence. They do not seek to plant deep roots but to taste the wind of different places, ideas, and sensations. Stability is not their enemy, but they fear becoming trapped in predictability. They might quote Nietzsche’s "Become who you are" not as a call to rigid self-definition, but as an invitation to endless reinvention.

They value freedom above security, though they are not reckless. Their choices-careers, relationships, even daily routines-are shaped by a need for fluidity. They may drift between jobs, not out of irresponsibility, but because they refuse to let a title define them. They are drawn to careers that allow movement-travel, entrepreneurship, creative fields-where structure is flexible enough to accommodate their restless spirit.

Relationships

In relationships, they are charming but elusive. They attract others with their openness, their willingness to engage deeply-but only for a time. They do not fear commitment, but they resist confinement. Their partners must understand that love, for them, is not a cage but a shared journey.

Friends admire their spontaneity, their ability to turn an ordinary evening into an adventure. Yet some may grow frustrated by their reluctance to settle into predictable rhythms. Their social circles are wide but fluid; they collect people like souvenirs, valuing each connection but rarely clinging.

Shadow

Beneath their free-spirited exterior lies a shadow of rootlessness. The very trait that makes them vibrant-their refusal to be tied down-can become a cage of its own. When taken to excess, their love of novelty becomes an avoidance of depth. They may mistake motion for growth, confusing the accumulation of experiences with true transformation.

At their worst, they grow bored too easily, abandoning projects, relationships, or even themselves when the initial thrill fades. They may struggle with a quiet existential dread-the fear that if they stop moving, they will disappear.

Conclusion

The healthiest version of this archetype learns that true freedom is not the absence of ties, but the ability to choose them. They come to understand that depth does not require stagnation, and that some of the richest discoveries come from staying long enough to see beneath the surface.

They are neither the eternal wanderer nor the settled homebody-but something in between. A modern Odysseus who, after years of travel, realizes that the journey was never just about the destination, but about who he became along the way.

And so they continue, bottle of Signature Story in hand, a scent that lingers just long enough to remind them-and those they meet-that life is not meant to be static.