Nuit Etoilee Goutal

Unisex
Eau de Toilette
Year: 2012
Moderate
Sillage
Moderate
Longevity
Spring, Summer
Best Season
Casual
Best For

Fragrance Story

Nuit Etoilee by Goutal is a Woody Aromatic fragrance for women and men. Nuit Etoilee was launched in 2012. Nuit Etoilee was created by Isabelle Doyen and Camille Goutal. Top notes are Mint, Citron and Orange; middle notes are Pine Tree and Fir; base notes are Immortelle, Angelica and Tonka Bean.

Composition Profile

aromatic 100%
woody 85%
green 70%
citrus 60%
fresh spicy 50%
sweet 40%
conifer 35%
fresh 30%
amber 25%
herbal 20%

About the Perfumer

Camille Goutal

Camille Goutal

Camille Goutal is a perfumer associated with the Goutal brand, continuing its legacy of artistic fragrances. She has created notable scents such as Ambre Fétiche, Bois D'hadrien, and La Violette. Her work often emphasizes natural floral and amber notes with a refined sensibility.

Fragrance Notes

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Mint Mint
Citron Citron
Orange Orange

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Pine Tree Pine Tree
Fir Fir

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Immortelle Immortelle
Angelica Angelica
Tonka Bean Tonka Bean

Character Profile

The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Nuit Etoilee Goutal

Essence

The one who wears Nuit Etoilée is not merely a person but a seeker-a wanderer between worlds. Their essence aligns most closely with the Mystic, an archetype rooted in the pursuit of the ineffable, the transcendent, the hidden truths that shimmer just beyond the grasp of ordinary perception. The Mystic does not merely live; they contemplate living. Their soul is drawn to the liminal-the threshold between night and dawn, between earth and sky.

Nuit Etoilée-a fragrance of cool pine, citrus, and distant stars-mirrors this. It is not loud, not demanding, but quietly arresting, like a whispered secret in the dark. The wearer is one who finds solace in solitude, yet their solitude is not empty; it is filled with the presence of something greater than themselves.

Style & Aesthetic

They are not the life of the party, but the one who stands at the edges, watching, listening. Their friendships are few but profound, built on shared silences as much as shared words. Romantic partners must understand their need for solitude; they will never be the type to merge entirely with another, for a part of them always belongs to the night sky.

Their lifestyle is unhurried, deliberate. They rise early or stay up late, whenever the world feels most still. They may travel often, but not for the sake of ticking destinations off a list-rather, to feel the pulse of different places, to stand under unfamiliar constellations.

Shadow

The Mystic’s greatest strength-their depth of perception-can also be their undoing. In their quest for the infinite, they may neglect the finite, the mundane necessities of life. They can become lost in their own mind, detached to the point of alienation. Their reluctance to engage fully with the world may leave them feeling like an eternal outsider, always watching, never belonging.

At worst, they may succumb to melancholy, a quiet despair that the world will never match the beauty of their inner visions. They must learn to bridge the celestial and the earthly-to let the stars guide them, but not to forget the ground beneath their feet.

Conclusion

Tastes & Style
Their aesthetic is one of understated elegance, favoring textures that evoke the natural world-soft wool, raw linen, the faint shimmer of silver like moonlight on water. They prefer muted colors: deep blues, slate grays, the occasional touch of midnight black. Their home is sparse but intentional, filled with books, dried botanicals, and perhaps an antique telescope or a well-worn map. They are drawn to art that suggests rather than declares-impressionist paintings, ambient music, poetry that lingers in the mind like an unfinished thought.

Philosophy & Values
They believe in depth over breadth, in meaning over spectacle. The Mystic does not chase happiness in the conventional sense; they seek understanding. They are drawn to philosophy, astronomy, mythology-anything that hints at the vastness of existence. Their values are not rigid but fluid, shaped by intuition rather than dogma. They distrust loud certainties, preferring the quiet wisdom of uncertainty.

Yet this very openness can become their shadow. Their reluctance to commit-to people, to beliefs, to a single path-can leave them adrift, a perpetual observer rather than a participant in life.