Une Rose Guerlain
Fragrance Story
Une Rose by Guerlain is a Floral fragrance for women. Une Rose was launched in 1908. The nose behind this fragrance is Jacques Guerlain. Top notes are Acácia, Bourbon Geranium, Verbena, Lilac, Petitgrain, Sweet Orange, Hyacinth and Neroli; middle notes are Rose Oil, Rose, Violet, Jasmine, Tuberose, Clove, Carnation and Heliotrope; base notes are Oakmoss, Patchouli, Sandalwood, Benzoin, Cedar, Ambergris, Tolu Balsam, Musk, Orris and Civet.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Jacques Guerlain
Jacques Guerlain is a legendary perfumer from the Guerlain family, known for his iconic creations. He composed classics such as Apres L'ondee, Bouquet De Faunes, and Djedi. His work also includes Champs Elysees in various concentrations, demonstrating his mastery of floral and oriental compositions.
Fragrance Notes
Top Notes
First impression · 15-30 min
Heart Notes
Core character · 2-4 hours
Base Notes
Lasting impression · 4+ hours
Une Rose Guerlain by Guerlain 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.
Une Rose Guerlain embodies the distinctive style of Guerlain while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Une Rose Guerlain
Essence
To wear Une Rose Guerlain is to embrace the rose not as mere ornament, but as a living emblem of passion, depth, and contradiction. The person who chooses this fragrance is not drawn to the obvious or the fleeting; they seek the essence-the soul-of beauty. Their archetype is The Lover, not in the trivial sense of romantic conquest, but in the Jungian sense of one who lives through the senses, who worships at the altars of beauty and connection, and who understands that love-in all its forms-is the most potent force in existence.
Style & Aesthetic
Their world is one of deliberate elegance. They do not chase trends but instead cultivate a personal aesthetic that is timeless, sensual, and slightly mysterious. Their wardrobe leans toward rich textures-velvet, silk, cashmere-in deep reds, blacks, and muted earth tones. They prefer subtlety to ostentation, yet there is always an undercurrent of intensity in their choices. A single piece of antique jewelry, a well-worn leather-bound book, a carefully arranged bouquet-these are the details that speak for them.
Their home is a sanctuary, filled with objects that carry meaning: a Persian rug inherited from a grandmother, a vintage perfume tray, a painting of a stormy landscape that mirrors their inner world. They understand that beauty is not passive; it must be tended, like a garden.
They do not merely work; they craft their life. Whether an artist, a curator, a writer, or even a scientist, they approach their vocation with the same reverence as their personal rituals. They are drawn to professions that allow them to shape meaning-teaching, healing, creating-but they chafe under bureaucracy or soulless routine.
Their leisure is equally intentional. They prefer intimate gatherings to loud parties, deep conversation to small talk. A perfect evening might be a shared bottle of wine, a record spinning in the background, the slow unraveling of ideas and confessions.
Philosophy & Values
For them, life is not merely to be lived but to be felt. They reject the cold utilitarianism of modern existence, believing instead in the sacredness of experience. Pleasure, to them, is not indulgence but a form of wisdom. A perfectly brewed cup of tea, the scent of rain on stone, the weight of a lover’s hand-these are their prayers.
Yet their devotion to beauty is not superficial. They see it as a path to truth, a way to transcend the mundane. They might quote Rilke or Baudelaire, not out of pretension, but because these poets articulate what they have always known: that ecstasy and melancholy are two sides of the same coin.
Relationships
In love, they are both giver and devourer. They love deeply, fiercely, with an almost mythic intensity. When they care for someone, they do so with their whole being-lavishing attention, memorizing the curve of a smile, the timbre of a laugh. But this very depth can become their undoing.
Their shadow is possessiveness, the fear that the beauty they cherish will slip away. They may cling too tightly, suffocate with devotion, or mistake obsession for love. Their challenge is to love without demand, to hold without crushing. When they fail, they retreat into melancholy, nursing old wounds like precious relics.
Shadow
The Lover’s greatest danger is the temptation to lose themselves in their passions. They may become hedonistic, mistaking sensation for fulfillment. Or they may grow bitter, resenting a world that does not match their ideals. At their worst, they are melodramatic, manipulative, or self-indulgent-using beauty as a shield against reality.
But when balanced, they are alchemists-transforming the raw material of existence into something luminous. They remind others that life, in all its fleeting fragility, is worth savoring.
Conclusion
The wearer of Une Rose Guerlain is both poet and pilgrim, seeking the divine in the tangible. They know that roses have thorns, that love wounds as often as it heals-and yet, they would not have it any other way. Their life is a testament to the belief that to feel deeply is to live fully, even when it burns.
In the end, they are not just admirers of beauty. They are its keepers.