Euphorie Hautt Privé
Fragrance Story
Euphorie by Hautt Privé is a Oriental Floral fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Euphorie was launched in 2024. The nose behind this fragrance is Edison Fujita. Top note is Sour Cherry; middle notes are Transparent Woods, Apricot and Rose; base notes are Agarwood, Cedar, Musk and Vanilla.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Edison Fujita
Edison Fujita is a Brazilian perfumer with a diverse portfolio spanning multiple brands, including Ana Hickmann's Donna Bouquet and Avatim's Amaú, Boníssimo Black, Gigi Lazuli, Seleto, Seleto Herbo, and Sublime. He also created Betty Boop Cute for the Betty Boop line. Fujita's work ranges from playful and floral to sophisticated and woody.
Fragrance Notes
Euphorie Hautt Privé by Hautt Privé 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.
Euphorie Hautt Privé embodies the distinctive style of Hautt Privé while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Euphorie Hautt Privé
Essence
To wear Euphorie Hautt Privé is to embrace an intoxicating paradox-a fragrance that is at once luminous and shadowed, opulent yet intimate. The person who chooses this scent is not merely drawn to its notes of bergamot, jasmine, and amber; they are seduced by its promise of transformation, its ability to blur the line between the sensual and the sublime. This individual is, at their core, a Lover-an archetype defined by passion, aesthetic devotion, and the relentless pursuit of beauty in all its forms.
Shadow
Yet the Lover’s greatest strength is also their most treacherous weakness. Their devotion to beauty can become a prison, a compulsion to chase after ever more intoxicating experiences, leaving them restless and insatiable. They may mistake intensity for depth, confusing passion with permanence. Their relationships, though electric, can be ephemeral-burning brightly before dissolving into memory, leaving behind the faintest trace of amber and regret.
There is also the danger of vanity, of becoming so enamored with their own allure that they lose touch with the raw, unrefined edges of life. They may disdain the mundane, dismissing anything that fails to meet their aesthetic standards as unworthy of attention. At their worst, they risk becoming a connoisseur of surfaces, mistaking the appearance of passion for its substance.
Conclusion
Their world is one of deliberate indulgence, where every sensation is curated, every experience heightened. They move through life with an artist’s eye, seeking out textures, colors, and scents that stir something deep within them. Their style is elegant but never ostentatious-luxurious fabrics that whisper rather than shout, silhouettes that hint at the body’s contours without surrendering to vulgarity. They are drawn to the interplay of light and shadow, much like the fragrance itself, which balances brightness with depth.
Philosophically, they reject asceticism but are equally wary of excess. Pleasure, for them, is not mere hedonism but a form of wisdom-an acknowledgment that life’s meaning is often found in fleeting moments of rapture. They believe in love as both an art and a discipline, something to be cultivated with patience and intensity. Their relationships are marked by a magnetic allure, an ability to make others feel seen, desired, even enchanted. They do not merely love; they worship-whether a person, an idea, or a fleeting sensation.