La Baguette Fendi
Fragrance Story
La Baguette by Fendi is a fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. La Baguette was launched in 2024. The nose behind this fragrance is Anne Flipo.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Anne Flipo
Anne Flipo is a French perfumer and a master of delicate, luminous compositions, often working with IFF and known for her refined floral and woody accords. Her style balances transparency with depth, creating scents that feel both airy and substantial, as seen in the ethereal Pleine Lune and the sophisticated Serpent Bohème. Among her notable creations are the bold 212 Vip Black and the radiant Joyphoria, showcasing her versatility across modern and classic aesthetics.
Fragrance Notes
Character Profile
The Archetype Archetype: Portrait of La Baguette Fendi
Essence
This individual is most closely aligned with the Enchantress archetype-a figure of allure, sophistication, and quiet power. The Enchantress does not merely exist in the world; she shapes it through presence, taste, and an intuitive understanding of human desire. La Baguette Fendi, with its warm, woody, subtly gourmand notes, is not a fragrance that shouts but one that lingers-like a secret whispered in a candlelit room. It is refined, sensual, and just slightly unpredictable, much like the person who wears it.
Style & Aesthetic
Her aesthetic is a paradox of discipline and indulgence. She favors structured silhouettes-tailored blazers, high-waisted trousers, and fitted dresses-but always with a touch of decadence: a silk scarf knotted just so, a vintage brooch, or leather gloves that suggest an old-world elegance. She is drawn to textures that demand to be touched-cashmere, suede, the worn leather of a well-loved book.
In art, she prefers the baroque over the minimalist, the layered over the stark. She might admire Caravaggio’s interplay of shadow and light, or the lush melancholy of a Chopin nocturne. Her home is curated but never sterile; every object has a story, a patina of memory.
Her days are structured around rituals-morning coffee in a porcelain cup, evening walks through cobblestone streets, the deliberate selection of a fragrance that matches her mood. She thrives in cities that breathe history-Paris, Rome, Vienna-places where the past is not dead but alive in the architecture, the food, the way people speak.
She is not a workaholic, but she is deeply engaged in her vocation, whatever it may be. Whether she is an artist, a curator, or a strategist, she approaches her craft with a blend of precision and intuition. Success, to her, is not measured in accolades but in the ability to shape her world on her own terms.
Philosophy & Values
She believes in the alchemy of experience-that life is not merely to be lived but to be savored, distilled into moments of meaning. There is a quiet hedonism in her worldview, but it is tempered by an awareness of transience. She does not chase pleasure blindly but seeks it with deliberation, knowing that true luxury lies in discernment.
Her values are rooted in autonomy and depth. She has little patience for superficiality, though she understands its utility. She values intelligence but distrusts arrogance; she admires passion but recoils from recklessness. Her moral compass is intuitive rather than dogmatic-she follows her instincts, even when they defy convention.
Relationships
She is neither the life of the party nor a recluse, but something more elusive-a presence that lingers in the periphery, drawing others in without effort. People are drawn to her because she listens with an intensity that makes them feel seen, yet she reveals little of herself unless she chooses to.
Romantically, she is magnetic but guarded. She does not give her affection lightly, and when she does, it is with a quiet intensity that can be overwhelming. She seeks a partner who is her equal-someone who understands the weight of silence, the language of subtle gestures.
Her friendships are few but profound. She does not suffer fools, but for those who earn her trust, she is fiercely loyal. She is the confidante who remembers the wine you loved years ago, the one who sends a book she knows will speak to your soul.
Shadow
Yet the Enchantress is not without her shadows. Her very magnetism can become a cage-she is so accustomed to being admired that she sometimes forgets how to be vulnerable. Her discernment can curdle into disdain; her patience for fools is thin, and she risks becoming cold in her selectivity.
There is also a danger of becoming too enchanted with her own mystique. She may retreat into her own carefully constructed world, mistaking solitude for strength and isolation for independence. The very qualities that make her captivating-her restraint, her mystery-can become walls that keep others at a distance.
Conclusion
The Enchantress is at her best when she remembers that true power lies not in withholding but in choosing when to reveal. La Baguette Fendi suits her because it is a fragrance of contrasts-warm yet reserved, familiar yet enigmatic. Like the scent, she is a paradox: a woman who understands that the deepest allure is not in being known, but in being worth knowing.