Tubereuse Dsh Perfumes

For Women
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2017
Moderate
Sillage
Good
Longevity
Spring, Summer
Best Season
Evening, Special Occasion
Best For

Fragrance Story

Tubereuse by DSH Perfumes is a Floral fragrance for women. The nose behind this fragrance is Dawn Spencer Hurwitz. Top notes are Mimosa and Citruses; middle note is Tuberose; base notes are Beeswax, Sandalwood, Heliotrope and Virginia Cedar.

Composition Profile

tuberose 100%
white floral 85%
powdery 70%
woody 60%
animalic 50%
beeswax 40%
yellow floral 35%
honey 30%
citrus 25%
floral 20%

About the Perfumer

Dawn Spencer Hurwitz

Dawn Spencer Hurwitz

Dawn Spencer Hurwitz is the founder and perfumer of DSH Perfumes, with a catalog spanning over 30 years of work. Her creations include 1,000 Lilies, Acqua Di Venezia, and Amber, as well as the American Perfumer series like Colorado. Hurwitz is known for her classical approach, often drawing on historical and geographical inspirations.

Fragrance Notes

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Mimosa Mimosa
Citruses Citruses

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Tuberose Tuberose

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Beeswax Beeswax
Sandalwood Sandalwood
Heliotrope Heliotrope
Virginia Cedar Virginia Cedar

Character Profile

The Mystic Archetype: Portrait of Tubereuse Dsh Perfumes

Essence

The Mystic archetype walks between worlds, attuned to the invisible threads that connect all things. Tubereuse captures this otherworldly spirit with its intoxicating, white floral heart-tuberose, that most hypnotic of blooms, rising like a chant from a moonlit garden. The mimosa and citrus top notes are like the first light of dawn, a veil lifting to reveal the sacred.

The base of beeswax, sandalwood, heliotrope, and cedar grounds the fragrance in earthy ritual, like incense smoke curling in a temple. The wearer is a seeker of mysteries, one who understands that the divine is not found in answers but in questions, in the spaces between breaths, in the scent of a flower that blooms only at night.

Style & Aesthetic

The Mystic dresses in layers of texture and shadow-flowing linen, velvet, silk that catches the light like moonlight on water. Their wardrobe is a collection of pieces that feel both ancient and timeless: a robe embroidered with stars, a shawl woven from alpaca wool, jewelry made of moonstone and silver.

Their aesthetic is one of quiet magic, of beauty that is felt rather than seen. They favor deep, earthy colors-indigo, charcoal, the green of moss-and accents of gold that catch the eye like a candle flame. Their home is a sanctuary of crystals, dried herbs, and books of poetry. They move through the world like a dream, leaving a trail of wonder.

Philosophy & Values

The Mystic believes that reality is a veil, and that the truest truths are felt, not spoken. They value intuition, mystery, and the wisdom of the body. Their philosophy is one of reverence: for the earth, for the cycles of the moon, for the sacredness of every living thing.

They honor the unknown, understanding that not all questions have answers and that this is the source of beauty. They practice presence, meditation, and the art of listening-to the wind, to the heartbeat, to the silence between words. Their values are rooted in the eternal, in the knowledge that we are all part of something vast and unknowable.

Relationships

The Mystic forms connections that are deep and soulful, but they guard their inner world carefully. They are drawn to kindred spirits, to those who understand the language of symbols and dreams. Their friendships are built on shared silence as much as shared words, on the comfort of being understood without explanation.

Romantically, they seek a partner who can meet them in the liminal spaces, who is not afraid of the dark. Their love is like the tuberose-intoxicating, transformative, and a little dangerous. They are loyal but not possessive, loving but not demanding. They offer their heart like a sacred gift, and they expect it to be treated with reverence.

Lifestyle

Their days are guided by intuition and ritual. They wake before dawn to meditate, to watch the light change, to breathe in the scent of cedar and sandalwood. They practice yoga, dance, or walking meditation, moving their body as a prayer. Their home is a temple of simplicity-a few beautiful objects, a vase of flowers, a bowl of water reflecting the sky.

They spend time in nature, gathering herbs, listening to birds, feeling the earth beneath their feet. They cook with intention, using ingredients that nourish both body and spirit. Their life is a series of sacred acts-lighting a candle, brewing tea, anointing themselves with perfume as a blessing for the day ahead.

Shadow

The Mystic’s shadow is escapism-a tendency to retreat from the world rather than engage with it. They can become lost in their inner landscape, disconnected from the practical demands of life. Their love of mystery can become a fear of clarity, a refusal to commit to the messy, mundane reality of human existence. The beeswax in Tubereuse hints at this edge: the sweetness that can become a trap, the honey that lures them away from the hive.

They risk becoming a ghost, present but not fully alive. Their shadow whispers that the material world is an illusion, but the truth is that the divine is found in the flesh, in the touch of a hand, in the scent of a flower, in the simple, sacred act of being here, now.

Conclusion

Tubereuse is the fragrance of the mystic’s soul-one that dances between worlds, that finds the sacred in the sensual, that knows that the greatest mystery is the one we live every day. It is a reminder that we are all made of stardust and soil, that the divine is not somewhere else but here, in the breath, in the bloom, in the beautiful, fleeting moment of being alive. To wear it is to step into the temple of your own body, to honor the mystery that you are.