Biche Dans L’absinthe Gobin Daudé

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2002
Moderate
Sillage
Good
Longevity
Fall
Best Season
Evening
Best For

Fragrance Story

Biche Dans L’Absinthe by Gobin Daudé is a Aromatic Green fragrance for women and men. Biche Dans L’Absinthe was launched in 2002. The nose behind this fragrance is Victoire Gobin Daude. Top notes are Cumin, Bergamot, Lemon and Lemon Leaf; middle notes are Absinthe, Lavender and Neroli; base notes are Hay, Immortelle and Tobacco.

Composition Profile

fresh spicy 100%
aromatic 85%
herbal 70%
citrus 60%
green 50%
sweet 40%
tobacco 35%
bitter 30%
lavender 25%
warm spicy 20%

About the Perfumer

Victoire Gobin Daude

Victoire Gobin Daude

Victoire Gobin Daude is a French perfumer and the founder of the niche perfume house Gobin Daudé. She has created several fragrances for her own brand, including Biche Dans L’absinthe, Jardins Ottomans, Nuit Au Désert, Sous Le Buis, and Sève Exquise. Her work is known for its artistic and evocative approach, often drawing inspiration from nature and travel.

Fragrance Notes

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Cumin Cumin
Bergamot Bergamot
Lemon Lemon
Lemon Leaf Lemon Leaf

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Absinthe Absinthe
Lavender Lavender
Neroli Neroli

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Hay Hay
Immortelle Immortelle
Tobacco Tobacco
Unique Character

Biche Dans L’absinthe Gobin Daudé by Gobin Daudé 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

Biche Dans L’absinthe Gobin Daudé embodies the distinctive style of Gobin Daudé while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.

Character Profile

The Alchemist Archetype: Portrait of Biche Dans L’absinthe Gobin Daudé

Essence

To wear Biche Dans L’Absinthe by Gobin Daudé is to embrace contradiction-the bitter and the sweet, the sacred and the profane. This fragrance, with its intoxicating blend of wormwood, honey, and dark florals, is not for those who seek comfort in the familiar. It is a potion for the seeker, the experimenter, the one who walks the line between genius and madness. The person who chooses this scent is an Alchemist-Jung’s archetype of transformation, the relentless pursuer of hidden truths.

They are drawn to the liminal, the spaces between waking and dreaming, between poison and remedy. Like the green fairy of absinthe lore, they shimmer with possibility, always on the verge of revelation or ruin.

Style & Aesthetic

They do not love easily, but when they do, it is with an intensity that borders on obsession. Their relationships are deep but fraught-they demand the same relentless self-examination from others that they impose on themselves. Some find them magnetic; others, exhausting.

Their lifestyle is one of controlled excess. They might indulge in late nights of wine and conversation, but always with a purpose-each experience is a thread in the tapestry of their becoming. They are not hedonists, but neither are they ascetics. They seek the sublime in the sensuous, the divine in the decadent.

Philosophy & Values

They believe in the power of transformation, not through brute force, but through subtle alchemy. Life, to them, is an experiment-one must dissolve before one can be reborn. They reject dogma but are not nihilists; instead, they seek meaning in the interplay of opposites.

Their values are rooted in authenticity, but their version of truth is not the plainspoken kind. They prefer the oblique, the layered, the truth that reveals itself only after one has wandered through labyrinths of thought. They despise cheap sentimentality, yet they are not cold-merely selective in their affections.

Shadow

Yet for all their brilliance, they are not without flaws. Their obsession with transformation can become a refusal to accept the present moment. They may grow impatient with those who do not share their vision, dismissing them as dull or unenlightened.

Their greatest danger is the lure of self-destruction-the belief that one must burn to be reborn. At their worst, they flirt with the abyss, mistaking disintegration for transcendence. They must learn that not all things need to be broken to be beautiful.

Conclusion

The lover of Biche Dans L’Absinthe is neither saint nor sinner, but something far more interesting-a soul in perpetual metamorphosis. They are the modern alchemist, turning the leaden weight of existence into fleeting gold. Their life is a work of art, forever unfinished, forever unfolding.

And perhaps that is enough.