Eau De Lavande Goutal
Fragrance Story
Eau de Lavande by Goutal is a Aromatic fragrance for women and men. Eau de Lavande was launched in 1981. The nose behind this fragrance is Annick Goutal. middle notes are Lavender and Spices; base notes are Tonka Bean and Vanilla.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Annick Goutal
Annick Goutal began her career as a pianist and model before founding her eponymous perfume house in 1981, where she worked closely with her daughter Camille Goutal. Known for a natural, luminous style, her compositions often highlight a single note, as seen in the citrusy Eau d'Hadrien and the fresh, floral Eau de Camille. Her creations, including the romantic Ce Soir Ou Jamais and the gentle Eau de Charlotte, are celebrated for their elegant simplicity and emotional resonance, establishing a legacy of intimate, artisanal perfumery.
Fragrance Notes
Eau De Lavande Goutal by Goutal 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.
Eau De Lavande Goutal embodies the distinctive style of Goutal while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Sage Archetype: Portrait of Eau De Lavande Goutal
Essence
To choose Eau De Lavande Goutal is to embrace a fragrance that is neither loud nor fleeting-it is a quiet declaration of depth. Lavender, with its herbal clarity and soft floral undertones, speaks of someone who values serenity, wisdom, and a touch of the timeless. This person is not drawn to the chaos of modern excess but seeks refuge in the measured, the refined, the enduring. They are, at their core, a Sage-an archetype defined by introspection, knowledge, and a quiet authority.
Shadow
Yet, wisdom has its price. Their tendency to observe rather than participate can slip into aloofness. They may mistake solitude for self-sufficiency, forgetting that even the most enlightened mind needs warmth. At times, their pursuit of clarity hardens into skepticism-they see through illusions so well that they struggle to believe in anything at all.
Their greatest flaw is the illusion of self-containment. They may pride themselves on needing no one, but this is a lie the mind tells to avoid vulnerability. When unbalanced, they retreat too far into thought, becoming spectators of their own lives. The lavender that soothes can also numb.
Conclusion
Their world is one of books, art, and long walks through landscapes that stir the mind as much as the senses. They prefer conversations that meander into philosophy, history, or the hidden patterns of human nature over small talk. Their home is curated-not sterile, but deliberate. A well-worn armchair by a window, shelves lined with volumes of poetry and essays, perhaps a single vase of dried lavender on the desk. They are drawn to muted colors-soft grays, deep blues, the pale purple of dusk-colors that do not shout but whisper.
They move through life with a certain detachment, not out of coldness, but because they observe before they engage. Their humor is dry, their insights sharp. They are the friend who listens intently and then, after a pause, offers a single sentence that unravels the entire problem.