A Forgotten Rose Perfume Oil Gucci

Unisex
Perfume Oil
Year: 2019
Moderate
Sillage
Good
Longevity
Spring
Best Season
Evening
Best For

Fragrance Story

A Forgotten Rose Perfume Oil by Gucci is a Floral fragrance for women and men. A Forgotten Rose Perfume Oil was launched in 2019. The nose behind this fragrance is Alberto Morillas.

Composition Profile

rose 100%
musky 85%
floral 70%
soft spicy 60%

About the Perfumer

Alberto Morillas

Alberto Morillas

Alberto Morillas is a master perfumer based in Geneva, Switzerland, and a longtime collaborator with Firmenich. His style is known for refined, luminous compositions that balance natural elegance with modern clarity. He created the bold leather and spice of Amouage Opus VII - Reckless Leather, the fresh citrus depth of Acqua di Parma Colonia Intensa, and the woody warmth of Aedes de Venustas Palissandre D'or. His work has shaped contemporary perfumery across both niche and luxury houses.

Fragrance Notes

All Notes

Complete scent profile

Bulgarian Rose Bulgarian Rose
Musk Musk
Pink Pepper Pink Pepper

Character Profile

The Lover Archetype: Portrait of A Forgotten Rose Perfume Oil Gucci

Essence

At the heart of this person lies The Romantic, an archetype that thrives on beauty, nostalgia, and the intoxicating pull of the past. They are drawn to A Forgotten Rose Perfume Oil not for its novelty, but for its whisper of something lost-a memory, a feeling, a fleeting moment preserved in scent. The Romantic seeks depth in emotion, meaning in aesthetics, and truth in the ephemeral. They are not merely sentimental; they are devotional, treating love, art, and experience as sacred.

Yet, like all archetypes, The Romantic has its shadow. Where there is devotion, there is also obsession. Where there is beauty, there is sometimes delusion. This person walks the fine line between passion and melancholy, between cherishing the past and being consumed by it.

Shadow

Their greatest strength is their capacity for wonder. They see the extraordinary in the ordinary-the way sunlight filters through a window, the way a single rose can carry the weight of a lifetime. They are the keepers of forgotten stories, the ones who remember anniversaries others overlook, who sense the unspoken sorrow in a friend’s smile.

But their shadow is their refusal to let go. They cling to what was, sometimes at the expense of what could be. Nostalgia, when unchecked, becomes a prison. They may idealize lovers who do not deserve them, revisit old wounds as if they were sacred texts, or resist change even when it is necessary. Their melancholy, though beautiful, can become a self-imposed exile.

Conclusion

Their tastes are deliberate, almost ritualistic. They prefer the weight of old books, the texture of aged linen, the muted glow of candlelight over the harshness of screens. Their wardrobe is a carefully curated archive-soft silks, tailored wool, perhaps a single piece of vintage jewelry worn daily, as if it holds a secret. They do not chase trends; they seek what resonates, what feels like an extension of their inner world.

Philosophically, they are drawn to the idea that life is not merely lived but felt. They might quote Rilke or Pessoa, not out of pretension, but because these voices articulate their own unspoken yearnings. They believe in the power of small, meaningful gestures-a handwritten letter, a shared silence, the way a scent can evoke an entire era.

In relationships, they are both tender and demanding. They love deeply but expect that love to be reciprocated with equal intensity. They are not satisfied with superficial connections; they crave intimacy that borders on the mystical. This can make them extraordinary partners-attentive, poetic, fiercely loyal-but it can also lead to disillusionment when reality fails to match their ideals.