Mademoiselle (2024) Godet
Fragrance Story
Mademoiselle (2024) by Godet is a fragrance for women. This is a new fragrance. Mademoiselle (2024) was launched in 2024. The nose behind this fragrance is Sonia Godet. Top notes are Jasmine, Lychee and Peony; middle notes are Violet, Raspberry, Rose and Iris; base notes are Rice Powder and Vanilla.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Sonia Godet
Sonia Godet is a perfumer who has created fragrances for the Godet brand, including Divinité, Mademoiselle, and Voyage À Saint Paul. Her work often features elegant, feminine compositions. She brings a refined sensibility to her creations.
Fragrance Notes
Mademoiselle (2024) Godet by Godet 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.
Mademoiselle (2024) Godet embodies the distinctive style of Godet while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Mademoiselle (2024) Godet
Essence
To wear Mademoiselle (2024) Godet is to embrace a paradox-sensuality restrained by elegance, passion tempered by refinement. This fragrance, with its interplay of citrus, floral, and woody notes, speaks to a personality that thrives on beauty, connection, and the pursuit of the sublime. The wearer is most closely aligned with the Lover archetype, though not in its most hedonistic or fleeting form. This is a Lover who understands that desire is not merely indulgence but an art form, a philosophy of life.
Style & Aesthetic
Their world is curated with intention. They favor textures that invite touch-cashmere that drapes just so, silk that whispers against the skin, leather that ages with character. Their wardrobe is neither ostentatious nor minimalistic, but balanced, with each piece chosen for its ability to evoke both admiration and intrigue. Colors are rich but never garish: deep burgundies, midnight blues, and muted golds dominate their palette.
Their home is an extension of this sensibility-spaces designed not just for living but for feeling. Candles flicker in the evenings, casting warm light over well-loved books and carefully arranged objets d’art. They surround themselves with beauty not out of vanity, but because they believe life should be lived with an almost sacred attentiveness to pleasure.
Mornings are sacred. They rise early, not out of obligation but because the quiet hours hold a kind of magic. Coffee is sipped slowly, preferably from a handcrafted cup. Even the most mundane tasks-applying perfume, selecting a scarf-are performed with deliberation.
They are drawn to experiences that engage the senses: a meticulously prepared meal, the cadence of a well-read poem, the weight of a vintage wine glass between their fingers. They do not merely consume; they savor.
Yet this very attentiveness can become a cage. In their quest for the perfect moment, they may forget to live in the imperfect present. They risk becoming connoisseurs of life rather than participants, observing beauty from a distance rather than surrendering to it.
Philosophy & Values
For them, love is not merely romance-it is the guiding principle of existence. They seek depth in every interaction, whether in friendship, art, or fleeting moments of solitude. They believe in the transformative power of passion, not as reckless abandon, but as a disciplined devotion to what moves the soul.
Yet this idealism has its shadow. Their pursuit of beauty can slip into a quiet elitism, an unconscious disdain for what they deem "common" or "unrefined." They may mistake aesthetic discernment for moral superiority, forgetting that true elegance lies not in exclusion but in generosity of spirit.
Relationships
They are magnetic, drawing others in with a gaze that suggests they see something rare in whomever they engage with. Their charm is not performative but intuitive-they know how to make people feel both desired and understood. Romantic partners are chosen not for status or convenience, but for their ability to match an intensity of feeling.
But here, too, lies a danger. The Lover’s shadow emerges when their need for emotional and sensual fulfillment becomes insatiable. They may grow restless in relationships, always seeking the next thrill, the next spark, mistaking novelty for depth. Or worse, they may idealize love to the point of disappointment, rejecting the imperfect but genuine in favor of an impossible fantasy.
Shadow
The Lover’s greatest strength-their capacity for deep feeling-is also their greatest vulnerability. When unbalanced, they may oscillate between indulgence and asceticism, fearing that without beauty, life is barren. The challenge for them is to embrace the raw, the unpolished, the fleeting. To learn that love is not only in the grand gesture but in the unremarkable, the flawed, the transient.
To wear Mademoiselle (2024) Godet is to walk this line-between refinement and abandon, between the ideal and the real. The true mastery of their archetype lies not in perfection, but in the wisdom to love the world as it is, not just as they wish it to be.