Fleur D'oranger Evody Parfums

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2015
Moderate
Sillage
Good
Longevity
Spring
Best Season
Casual
Best For

Fragrance Story

Fleur d'Oranger by Evody Parfums is a Floral Woody Musk fragrance for women and men. Fleur d'Oranger was launched in 2015. The nose behind this fragrance is Anne-Sophie Behaghel. Top notes are Bergamot and Mandarin Orange; middle notes are Neroli, Orange Blossom and Petitgrain; base notes are Musk, Ambroxan and Cedar.

Composition Profile

citrus 100%
white floral 85%
fresh spicy 70%
musky 60%
aromatic 50%
green 40%

About the Perfumer

Anne-Sophie Behaghel

Anne-Sophie Behaghel

Anne-Sophie Behaghel is a French perfumer known for her work with independent and niche fragrance houses. Her style often blends natural and synthetic elements to create bold, textural compositions with a modern edge. She has created distinctive scents for Adi Ale Van, including the floral-powdery Hai Hui Flower Power and the earthy Mioritic, as well as the mineral-driven Sel d'Argent for BDK Parfums. Her work continues to push boundaries in contemporary perfumery.

Fragrance Notes

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Bergamot Bergamot
Mandarin Orange Mandarin Orange

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Neroli Neroli
Orange Blossom Orange Blossom
Petitgrain Petitgrain

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Musk Musk
Ambroxan Ambroxan
Cedar Cedar

Character Profile

The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Fleur D'oranger Evody Parfums

Essence

To wear Fleur D'Oranger Evody is to embrace the sunlit purity of orange blossoms-a fragrance that is delicate yet persistent, luminous yet grounded. This person is drawn to the scent not for its complexity but for its clarity, its ability to evoke warmth without heaviness. They are, at their core, an embodiment of the Innocent archetype-one who seeks harmony, simplicity, and an unspoiled connection to beauty.

Their presence is like a quiet garden at dawn, where dew still clings to petals and the air hums with the promise of a new day. They move through life with an unforced grace, preferring sincerity over artifice, and tenderness over cynicism. Yet beneath this softness lies a quiet resilience, a refusal to let the world’s harshness erode their belief in goodness.

Style & Aesthetic

Their tastes are refined but never ostentatious. They favor natural fabrics-linen, cotton, silk-in muted, earthy tones that whisper rather than shout. Their home is a sanctuary of light and space, where fresh flowers and well-worn books share shelves, and every object carries meaning without clutter.

In art, they are drawn to Impressionism-the way Monet captured light, how Degas rendered fleeting moments-because it mirrors their own perception of life: transient yet eternal, fragile yet enduring. Music, for them, is Chopin’s nocturnes or the gentle strumming of a classical guitar-melodies that speak to the soul without demanding anything in return.

They thrive in routines that honor quietude-morning tea in sunlight, long walks through parks or along shorelines, evenings spent reading or in soft conversation. They are not lazy but deliberate, understanding that life’s sweetness is found in pauses, not in haste.

Professionally, they gravitate toward roles that nurture-teaching, healing, creating. They are not driven by ambition but by purpose, and they excel in environments where empathy is valued over aggression. Yet this can also be their limitation: they may shy away from competition, even when it is necessary, and their aversion to conflict can leave them overlooked in more cutthroat arenas.

Philosophy & Values

They believe, perhaps stubbornly, in the fundamental goodness of people. Their philosophy is not naive but deliberate-a choice to see kindness where others see indifference, to find hope where others see only decay. They reject nihilism, not out of ignorance, but because they have weighed despair and found it wanting.

Their values are rooted in authenticity and compassion. They despise cruelty, whether in words or deeds, and they have little patience for those who wield power carelessly. Yet this idealism is both their strength and their vulnerability. They can be wounded deeply by betrayal, for they trust easily, and their disappointment is not in others but in the shattered illusion of what they believed the world could be.

Relationships

In love, they are tender and devoted, offering affection without reservation. They do not play games; their heart is an open book, and they expect the same in return. Their friendships are deep but few-they would rather have one true companion than a dozen hollow connections.

Yet their shadow emerges here: their need for harmony can make them conflict-averse, avoiding necessary confrontations to preserve peace. They may tolerate mistreatment longer than they should, mistaking patience for virtue. And when their trust is broken, they do not rage-they retreat, folding inward like a flower at dusk.

Shadow

The Innocent’s greatest flaw is not their optimism but their reluctance to face darkness-both in the world and in themselves. They may deny their own anger, suppress their doubts, or ignore harsh truths to maintain their inner equilibrium. When life forces them to confront pain, they risk either collapsing into disillusionment or retreating further into fantasy.

Yet if they integrate their shadow-acknowledging that strength lies not in avoiding suffering but in enduring it-they become not just gentle, but unbreakable. Their innocence then is no longer naivety but wisdom, a conscious choice to remain open-hearted in a world that often rewards hardness.

Conclusion

Fleur D'Oranger is their essence distilled: luminous, unpretentious, enduring. It is the scent of someone who has not lost their wonder, who still believes in the possibility of beauty amid chaos. They are not blind to life’s sorrows; they simply refuse to let them define existence.

In a world that often mistakes cynicism for intelligence and cruelty for strength, they are a quiet rebellion-a living testament to the power of softness. And though they may never dominate or conquer, they endure, like the orange blossom that thrives under the harshest sun.