Smoke Jumping Folkwinds

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2023
Moderate
Sillage
Good
Longevity
Fall
Best Season
Casual
Best For

Fragrance Story

Smoke Jumping by Folkwinds is a fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Smoke Jumping was launched in 2023. The nose behind this fragrance is Jono Bornstein.

Composition Profile

wine 100%
woody 85%
smoky 70%

About the Perfumer

Jono Bornstein

Jono Bornstein

Jono Bornstein created eight fragrances for Folkwinds, including American Amber, American Pharoah, By-and-by, Cloud Illusions, Jasper No Kodō, Midwinter Dream, Santi Ana, and Sleepy Hollow. His work explores a wide array of inspirations, from nature and folklore to abstract concepts. The collection highlights his versatility and depth as a perfumer.

Fragrance Notes

All Notes

Complete scent profile

Red Wine Red Wine
Oak Oak
Smoke Smoke
Natural Musk Natural Musk
Tobacco Tobacco
Vanilla Vanilla

Character Profile

The Wanderer Archetype: Portrait of Smoke Jumping Folkwinds

Essence

Archetype: The Wanderer
The one who chooses Smoke Jumping Folkwinds as their scent is not bound by convention. Their spirit is restless, their mind untamed-they are the Wanderer, the seeker who thrives on the edge of the known and the unknown. This archetype embodies freedom, exploration, and a refusal to be pinned down by societal expectations. Yet, like all archetypes, it carries its shadow-the risk of rootlessness, detachment, and an inability to commit.

Their life is a series of departures and arrivals, never static, always in motion. The scent they wear-earthy, smoky, with an undercurrent of wild winds-mirrors their soul. It is not a fragrance for those who crave comfort in the familiar; it is for those who find beauty in the untamed, the raw, the fleeting.

They are drawn to experiences that demand courage-backpacking through remote landscapes, late-night conversations with strangers, the thrill of a storm rolling in. Their philosophy is simple: life is not meant to be curated, but lived. They distrust dogma, preferring intuition over rigid systems. Their values are fluid, shaped by encounters rather than doctrines.

Style & Aesthetic

Their appearance is a paradox-both deliberate and effortlessly undone. Leather jackets worn soft with time, boots scuffed from miles walked, fabrics that carry the scent of campfires and open roads. They favor textures over trends, utility over ornamentation. Their style is not a statement but an extension of their way of being-unpolished, authentic, resistant to confinement.

In art and music, they gravitate toward the raw and the unrefined-folk ballads, blues, the kind of poetry that feels like it was written in the back of a moving train. They have little patience for the overly polished, the artificial. Beauty, to them, must bear the marks of life.

Relationships

They love deeply but fleetingly. Their connections are intense, forged in moments of shared vulnerability, but they resist the weight of permanence. They are the lover who leaves letters under your door but vanishes before dawn.

Friends admire their loyalty in crisis-they are the first to arrive when needed, the last to judge. Yet they are also the one who disappears for months, returning with stories but no explanations. Their relationships thrive on freedom; they wither under expectation.

Shadow

The Wanderer’s greatest strength is also their flaw. Their refusal to be tied down can become a refusal to grow. They mistake movement for progress, mistaking the next horizon for the answer. Beneath their independence lies a quiet fear-what if they stop and find nothing?

They may romanticize solitude to the point of isolation, avoiding the mundane work of building something lasting. Their life, though rich in experience, can lack depth. The very wind they chase may one day leave them hollow.

Conclusion

They are neither hero nor rebel-just a soul who understands that some answers are found only in motion. Their scent, Smoke Jumping Folkwinds, is not just a fragrance but a manifesto: life is wild, fleeting, and beautiful precisely because it cannot be held.

Yet the question lingers-will they ever let the wind carry them home? Or is home, for them, always the next unknown?