Ex Manifattura Tabacchi Floridia Parfum
Fragrance Story
Ex Manifattura Tabacchi by Floridia Parfum is a Woody Aromatic fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Ex Manifattura Tabacchi was launched in 2024. The nose behind this fragrance is Giovanni Festa. Top notes are Tobacco, Myrtle and Violet; middle notes are Lavender, Vetiver and Vanilla; base notes are Guaiac Wood and Norlimbanol™.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Giovanni Festa
Giovanni Festa has composed fragrances for Adi Ale Van, including Coliva and The Book Of Wisdom, as well as Aulentissima's Amande. His work often explores gourmand and elixir-like themes. Festa's style is characterized by rich, layered compositions.
Fragrance Notes
Ex Manifattura Tabacchi Floridia Parfum by Floridia Parfum 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.
Ex Manifattura Tabacchi Floridia Parfum embodies the distinctive style of Floridia Parfum while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Ex Manifattura Tabacchi Floridia Parfum
Essence
This person is most closely aligned with The Lover archetype-a figure who seeks beauty, passion, and deep sensory experience. The Lover is drawn to what is exquisite, intoxicating, and emotionally resonant. The choice of Ex Manifattura Tabacchi Floridia Parfum-a fragrance that blends rich tobacco, warm spices, and delicate florals-reveals a soul that thrives on contrast, depth, and the interplay of light and shadow. The Lover does not merely exist; they experience, with an intensity that borders on the devotional.
Yet, like all archetypes, The Lover has a shadow-one that risks indulgence, obsession, or a tendency to lose themselves in sensation. This person walks the line between ecstasy and excess, between devotion and dependency.
Style & Aesthetic
Their tastes are refined but never sterile. They prefer the warmth of aged leather, the weight of a well-worn book, the flicker of candlelight on dark wood. Their home is a sanctuary of textures-velvet drapes, Persian rugs, the faint scent of incense lingering in the air. They are drawn to art that evokes longing: Caravaggio’s chiaroscuro, the poetry of Rilke, the melancholic chords of a nocturne.
In fashion, they favor timeless elegance-tailored coats, silk scarves, perhaps a single bold accessory that speaks without shouting. Their style is not ostentatious but deliberate, an extension of their inner world.
Their days are structured around small, sacred rituals-morning coffee in a porcelain cup, evening walks under dim streetlights, the deliberate application of their signature scent. They are not bound by routine but by rhythm, a cadence that allows for both discipline and spontaneity.
Yet, this devotion to sensation can become escapism. When life grows dull or painful, they may retreat into aestheticism, using beauty as a shield against the mundane. The true test of their character is whether they can find meaning even in the absence of ecstasy.
Philosophy & Values
They believe life should be lived with intention, that beauty is not frivolous but essential. To them, a meal is not just sustenance but an act of communion; a conversation is not mere exchange but a dance of minds. They value depth over breadth, intensity over convenience.
Yet, this philosophy carries risk. Their pursuit of the sublime can tip into hedonism-a need to feel so deeply that they sometimes lose themselves in sensation. They may struggle with moderation, fearing that to live half-heartedly is to not live at all.
Relationships
In love, they are both tender and demanding. They do not settle for superficial connections; they crave a bond that is electric, consuming. Their relationships are marked by intensity-grand gestures, whispered confessions, moments of raw vulnerability.
But their shadow emerges when passion wanes. They may grow restless, seeking new thrills, or cling too tightly, fearing the loss of what once burned so brightly. Their challenge is to love without possession, to appreciate the ephemeral without despair.
Shadow
The Lover’s greatest danger is their own hunger. They may mistake intensity for truth, believing that only what overwhelms the senses is real. They might chase after lovers, experiences, or possessions with a fervor that borders on self-destruction.
But in their best moments, they understand that true passion is not about possession but presence. They learn that beauty exists not only in grand gestures but in quiet, steadfast devotion-to a craft, a person, a way of being.
Conclusion
This is a person who lives at the intersection of fire and ash, where desire and wisdom meet. Their love for Floridia is no accident-it is the scent of their soul: complex, intoxicating, impossible to ignore. They are both the flame and the moth, drawn to what illuminates even as it consumes.
To know them is to understand that life’s deepest pleasures are also its sharpest pains-and that this, perhaps, is the point.