Faberlic By Valentin Yudashkin Faberlic
Fragrance Story
Faberlic by Valentin Yudashkin by Faberlic is a Woody Aquatic fragrance for men. Faberlic by Valentin Yudashkin was launched in 2017. The nose behind this fragrance is Bertrand Duchaufour. Top notes are Sea Notes, Grapefruit and Aldehydes; middle notes are Nutmeg, Tobacco, Dark Chocolate, Bay Leaf, Geranium and Tomato Leaf; base notes are Amber, Sandal, Patchouli, Cedar, Myrrh, Tonka Bean, Ambergris, Musk and Pine 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
Character Profile
The Alchemist Archetype: Portrait of Faberlic By Valentin Yudashkin Faberlic
Essence
To wear Faberlic by Valentin Yudashkin is to embrace transformation-not through brute force, but through refinement. This fragrance, with its blend of floral elegance and understated depth, appeals to a mind that seeks to transmute the ordinary into the extraordinary. The wearer is an Alchemist, one who believes in the hidden potential of things, who sees beauty in the interplay of contrasts, and who strives to elevate their surroundings through intention and artistry.
The Alchemist is drawn to complexity, to fragrances that unfold in layers rather than announce themselves with blunt force. Faberlic is not a scent of raw power, but of quiet mastery-a balance of floral delicacy and woody warmth. Similarly, the Alchemist’s personality is one of synthesis, blending intellect with intuition, tradition with modernity.
They are likely drawn to careers or hobbies that allow them to shape and refine-design, writing, perfumery itself, or even sciences that deal with transformation, like chemistry or psychology. Their home is curated, not cluttered; each object has been chosen for its resonance, not its utility alone. They appreciate craftsmanship, the slow work of hands, the subtlety of a well-placed detail.
In relationships, they are selective, valuing depth over breadth. They do not collect friends, but cultivate them, seeking those who appreciate nuance and who can engage in the alchemy of meaningful exchange. Their love is not possessive, but transformative-they wish to see their partner grow, to become more themselves, just as they seek the same.
Shadow
Yet every alchemical process risks stagnation-the refusal to accept impurity, the fear of the unrefined. The Alchemist’s flaw is their occasional disdain for the raw, the untamed, the messiness of life. They may grow impatient with those who do not share their standards, dismissing spontaneity as vulgarity or passion as lack of control.
There is also the danger of becoming lost in their own labyrinth of symbolism. They may over-intellectualize emotions, treating love as a puzzle to solve rather than a force to experience. Their pursuit of refinement can become a cage, isolating them from the vitality of unpolished reality.
At their worst, they may slip into elitism, believing that only those who share their tastes are worthy of their time. The very discernment that makes them exceptional can harden into judgment, cutting them off from the very transformations they claim to seek.
Conclusion
The Alchemist’s greatest strength is their ability to perceive what others overlook. Where some see only chaos, they discern patterns; where others accept the surface, they delve deeper. Their aesthetic is polished but never sterile-there is always a hint of mystery, a suggestion that more lies beneath.
They value knowledge, not as a means to power, but as a tool for elevation. Philosophy, art, and science are not separate realms to them, but different expressions of the same pursuit: the refinement of existence. They are drawn to thinkers like Jung, Nietzsche, or even alchemical writers like Paracelsus-those who sought to bridge matter and spirit.
Their sense of style is deliberate, neither flamboyant nor austere. They favor textures and tones that suggest depth-velvet, silk, deep blues, and muted golds. Their fragrance is an extension of this philosophy: a whisper rather than a shout, yet impossible to ignore once noticed.