Rose Splendide Goutal

For Women
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2010
Moderate
Sillage
Moderate
Longevity
Spring
Best Season
Casual
Best For

Fragrance Story

Rose Splendide by Goutal is a Floral fragrance for women. Rose Splendide was launched in 2010. Rose Splendide was created by Isabelle Doyen and Camille Goutal.

Composition Profile

rose 100%
floral 85%
fruity 70%
musky 60%
sweet 50%
aquatic 40%
citrus 35%
powdery 30%
fresh 25%

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

All Notes

Complete scent profile

Rose Rose
Pear Pear
Magnolia Magnolia
Musk Musk
Vanilla Vanilla
Unique Character

Rose Splendide Goutal by Goutal 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

Rose Splendide Goutal embodies the distinctive style of Goutal while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.

Character Profile

The Rose Splendide Devotee Archetype: Portrait of Rose Splendide Goutal

Essence

To wear Rose Splendide by Goutal is to embrace an essence both timeless and deeply personal-a fragrance that does not shout but lingers, like a memory half-remembered yet impossible to forget. This is not the rose of grandiosity, nor the rose of cloying sweetness, but one of quiet radiance, layered with depth. The person who chooses this scent is drawn to beauty that is both refined and untamed, a paradox that mirrors their own nature.

Above all, they are defined by the Lover archetype, though not in the trivial sense of mere romanticism. Their love is an expansive force-directed toward art, toward people, toward the fleeting moments that shimmer with meaning. They seek connection, not as a means to an end, but as an end in itself. The Lover thrives on intimacy, on the exchange of emotions, on the way a glance or a scent can evoke entire worlds.

Yet, like all archetypes, the Lover has its shadow. Where there is deep feeling, there is also susceptibility to melancholy, to possessiveness, to the fear of losing what is cherished. Their intensity, though their greatest strength, can also become their undoing.

Style & Aesthetic

Their surroundings are never accidental. They favor interiors where light plays upon old wood, where books are arranged not by system but by the mood they evoke. Their wardrobe leans toward the tactile-linen that wrinkles with life, silk that whispers against skin. They prefer understatement to ostentation, yet their choices are deliberate, each piece a quiet declaration of self.

Philosophically, they are drawn to the idea that beauty is not frivolous but necessary-a counterbalance to life’s inevitable harshness. They might quote Rilke or Pessoa in conversation, not to impress but because these voices echo their own inner dialogues. They believe in the sacredness of small things: the way steam curls from a teacup, the weight of a well-made pen in the hand.

Relationships

They do not collect acquaintances; they cultivate intimates. Their friendships are few but enduring, built on shared silences as much as shared words. In love, they are neither passive nor possessive, but they demand a reciprocity of feeling-anything less feels like a betrayal.

Yet here, the shadow emerges. Their capacity for devotion can tip into dependency. They may mistake intensity for permanence, forgetting that even the most exquisite rose wilts in time. When wounded, they retreat into a private world of old letters and unsent messages, nursing hurts longer than necessary.

Shadow

Their greatest flaw is their reluctance to let go. They cling-to lovers who have moved on, to versions of themselves that no longer fit, to ideals that may never manifest. This refusal to release can turn their inner world into a museum of past joys, leaving little space for new ones.

And yet, this very flaw is also their redemption. Their refusal to be cynical, their insistence on feeling deeply in a world that often rewards detachment, is a quiet act of rebellion. They are not naive-they have seen enough to know how love can fail-but they choose to believe anyway.

Conclusion

They are not the hero of grand narratives, nor the sage dispensing wisdom from afar. They are the one who pauses to inhale the scent of roses on an evening walk, who remembers birthdays with handwritten notes, who finds poetry in the mundane. Their life is not without sorrow, but it is rich with meaning-because they have decided it must be.

In the end, they are like their beloved fragrance: complex, layered, impossible to reduce to a single note. And perhaps that is the most fitting epitaph for a Lover-to be remembered not for any one thing, but for the way they made the world feel alive, if only for a moment.