Biblioteca De Babel Fueguia 1833

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2010
Moderate
Sillage
Good
Longevity
Fall
Best Season
Evening
Best For

Fragrance Story

Biblioteca de Babel by Fueguia 1833 is a Woody Spicy fragrance for women and men. Biblioteca de Babel was launched in 2010. The nose behind this fragrance is Julian Bedel. Top note is Cedar; middle note is Mahogany; base note is Cinnamon.

Composition Profile

woody 100%
cinnamon 85%
warm spicy 70%
aromatic 60%

About the Perfumer

Julian Bedel

Julian Bedel

Julian Bedel is a perfumer for Fueguia 1833, an Argentine niche fragrance house. His catalog includes Acacia, Agua De Gardenia, and Agua Magnoliana, as well as Aguila De Ambar, Alba, Alhambra, Alma, and Amalia Gourmand. His compositions often draw from natural ingredients and South American inspirations.

Fragrance Notes

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Cedar Cedar

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Mahogany Mahogany

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Cinnamon Cinnamon
Unique Character

Biblioteca De Babel Fueguia 1833 by Fueguia 1833 offers a distinctive olfactory experience that stands out from other fragrances in its category.

Artisanal Creation

Crafted with the finest ingredients and a blend of traditional and modern perfumery techniques, this fragrance represents the pinnacle of the perfumer's art.

Signature Style

Biblioteca De Babel Fueguia 1833 embodies the distinctive style of Fueguia 1833 while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.

Character Profile

The Biblioteca De Babel Enthus Archetype: Portrait of Biblioteca De Babel Fueguia 1833

Essence

This person is, above all, a seeker of knowledge-not the dry, academic kind, but the kind that lingers in the margins of ancient manuscripts, in the scent of leather-bound books, and in the quiet hum of a library at dusk. Their soul is most at home in contemplation, and their chosen fragrance, Biblioteca De Babel by Fueguia 1833, reflects this. The scent-a blend of aged paper, ink, leather, and faint whispers of incense-is not merely a perfume but an olfactory library, a distillation of wisdom and mystery.

The Sage archetype fits them perfectly. They are drawn to the pursuit of understanding, not for power or prestige, but because they believe truth itself is sacred. Their mind is a labyrinth of ideas, theories, and half-formed philosophies, always searching but never fully satisfied. They are the kind of person who reads not to finish books, but to live inside them.

Style & Aesthetic

They thrive in environments that allow for solitude but also stimulation. A small apartment lined with books, a quiet café with good lighting, a cabin in the woods with a sturdy desk-these are their sanctuaries. They may travel, but not for sightseeing; they seek out bookshops, archives, places where the past lingers in the air like dust motes in sunlight.

They are not ascetics-they enjoy good wine, the right music, the perfect cup of coffee-but their pleasures are measured, never indulgent. Excess disgusts them; they prefer the slow savoring of experience over the frenzy of consumption.

Relationships

They are not the type to surround themselves with many people, but those they do let in are held close. Their friendships are built on mutual respect for depth and honesty. Romantic partners must be willing to navigate their occasional detachment, but those who do will find a fiercely loyal, if occasionally absent-minded, companion.

They are drawn to people who challenge them-not with brute force, but with quiet intelligence. A debate partner, a fellow traveler in the realms of thought, is more enticing to them than someone who offers only comfort.

Shadow

Yet, their devotion to the life of the mind has its costs. They can become lost in abstraction, retreating so deeply into thought that the world outside fades into irrelevance. Relationships may suffer-not because they lack warmth, but because they sometimes forget that not everything can be understood through analysis.

Their skepticism, while a virtue in moderation, can harden into cynicism. They may dismiss emotions as irrational or undervalue experiences that cannot be neatly categorized. At their worst, they become like the library itself-a vast repository of knowledge, but one that remains locked, its treasures inaccessible to those who lack the key.

Conclusion

In the end, they are defined by their hunger-not for power, not for pleasure, but for understanding. Biblioteca De Babel is their scent because it captures the essence of their existence: the smell of old knowledge, the thrill of the unsolved, the quiet melancholy of knowing that some mysteries will always remain just out of reach.

They are the Sage, but also the student-forever wandering the stacks of their own mind, searching for the book that holds the answer to a question they have yet to fully articulate.