100 Tweeds Euphorium Brooklyn
Fragrance Story
100 Tweeds by Euphorium Brooklyn is a Aromatic Fougere fragrance for women and men. 100 Tweeds was launched in 2015. The nose behind this fragrance is Stephen Dirkes.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Stephen Dirkes
Stephen Dirkes is the founder and perfumer of Euphorium Brooklyn, a niche house known for its avant-garde and narrative-driven scents. His catalog includes 100 Tweeds, Bay Rum, Butterfly, Chocolatl, Cilice, Flocked & Gilded, Petales, and Suédois. Dirkes' fragrances often explore dark, historical, and sensory themes with a bold, artistic approach.
Fragrance Notes
All Notes
Complete scent profile
100 Tweeds Euphorium Brooklyn by Euphorium Brooklyn 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.
100 Tweeds Euphorium Brooklyn embodies the distinctive style of Euphorium Brooklyn while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Alchemist Archetype: Portrait of 100 Tweeds Euphorium Brooklyn
Essence
The person who favors 100 Tweeds by Euphorium Brooklyn is an Alchemist-a seeker of transformation, a weaver of paradoxes, and a connoisseur of the unconventional. The fragrance itself is a study in contrasts: smoky yet refined, earthy yet sophisticated, evoking the scent of old libraries, damp wool, and smoldering embers. Like the perfume, the Alchemist is drawn to the interplay of textures, ideas, and eras, blending them into something uniquely their own.
They are not content with the obvious or the superficial. Their mind is a crucible where tradition and avant-garde thought dissolve and reform. They do not merely wear a scent-they embody an atmosphere, a mood, a statement.
Style & Aesthetic
Their style is an intentional dissonance-tailored tweed jackets paired with weathered boots, vintage silk scarves draped over minimalist modern lines. They appreciate the weight of history in fabric, the whisper of time in scent, but they refuse to be bound by nostalgia. Their home is a carefully composed chaos: a mid-century chair beside an antique apothecary cabinet, shelves lined with esoteric books and obscure vinyl records.
They drink smoky Lapsang Souchon tea but might also savor an experimental mezcal. Their playlist drifts from Erik Satie to post-punk, never settling into predictability. They are drawn to art that unsettles, literature that lingers in the subconscious, films that leave questions unanswered.
They thrive in environments that allow for reinvention-cities with layers of history, professions that demand both creativity and precision. They might be a perfumer, an archivist, a designer, or a philosopher. Their work is not just a job but an extension of their identity.
Routine bores them, but they are not reckless. Their experiments are deliberate, their risks calculated. They may travel not for escapism but for the alchemy of new perspectives.
Philosophy & Values
The Alchemist does not believe in easy answers. They are skeptical of dogma, preferring instead the slow burn of inquiry. Their philosophy is one of transformation-not just of materials, but of self. They see life as an ongoing experiment, a series of reactions and distillations.
They value depth over dogma, curiosity over certainty. They are drawn to the liminal-the spaces between categories, the moments just before change. They may meditate on Jung’s shadow work, alchemical symbolism, or the philosophy of Heraclitus, finding resonance in the idea that one never steps into the same river twice.
Yet this very pursuit of transformation can become its own kind of dogma. They may dismiss the mundane too quickly, mistaking simplicity for shallowness.
Relationships
The Alchemist attracts others with their enigmatic presence. They are not a crowd-pleaser but a cult figure-those who get them are fiercely loyal, while others find them impenetrable. Their relationships are deep but few, built on shared intellectual and aesthetic wavelengths.
Romantically, they are drawn to partners who are equally self-contained, who understand the need for solitude as much as connection. They disdain small talk, preferring conversations that spiral into the abstract or the personal. Yet their very intensity can be isolating-they may withdraw when others cannot meet their depth, or they may grow impatient with emotional simplicity.
Shadow
The Alchemist’s greatest strength-their relentless pursuit of transformation-can also be their undoing. In their quest for depth, they may over-intellectualize emotion, mistaking detachment for wisdom. Their disdain for the ordinary can curdle into elitism, a quiet arrogance toward those who find joy in simplicity.
They may also struggle with restlessness, never satisfied, always seeking the next refinement, the next revelation. This can lead to a kind of existential fatigue-a sense that nothing is ever quite enough.
Conclusion
To wear 100 Tweeds is to embrace contradiction: the warmth of wool and the chill of distance, the comfort of tradition and the thrill of reinvention. The Alchemist is both scientist and mystic, artisan and philosopher. They are not for everyone-but for those who recognize them, they are unforgettable.
They do not seek to be understood. They seek to be experienced.