Sweet Home Hilde Soliani

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2017
Moderate
Sillage
Good
Longevity
Winter
Best Season
Casual
Best For

Fragrance Story

Sweet Home by Hilde Soliani is a Oriental Vanilla fragrance for women and men. Sweet Home was launched in 2017. The nose behind this fragrance is Hilde Soliani.

Composition Profile

sweet 100%
nutty 85%
vanilla 70%
balsamic 60%
warm spicy 50%
amber 40%

About the Perfumer

Hilde Soliani

Hilde Soliani

Hilde Soliani is an Italian perfumer who founded her namesake brand, Hilde Soliani. Her fragrances, such as 24-09-11, Acquiilssssima, and Amore, often explore gourmand and floral themes with a playful, artistic touch. Soliani’s work is known for its creativity and emotional depth, reflecting her background in art and design.

Fragrance Notes

All Notes

Complete scent profile

Sugar Sugar
Chestnut Chestnut
Unique Character

Sweet Home Hilde Soliani by Hilde Soliani 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

Sweet Home Hilde Soliani embodies the distinctive style of Hilde Soliani while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.

Character Profile

The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Sweet Home Hilde Soliani

Essence

Fragrance as an Extension of Self
To wear Sweet Home by Hilde Soliani is to embrace a scent that is unabashedly comforting-vanilla, caramel, and toasted sugar wrapped in warmth. This is not a fragrance for those who wish to remain distant or enigmatic; it is for those who want to be enveloped, to draw others near, to create an atmosphere of indulgence and intimacy. The person who chooses this scent does not merely wear perfume-they embody it, allowing it to amplify their essence rather than mask it.

A Life of Sensory Richness
Their world is one of tactile pleasures, of textures and tastes, of spaces that feel lived-in and welcoming. Their home is likely filled with soft blankets, well-worn books, and the lingering aroma of freshly baked goods. They are drawn to deep, earthy colors-burnt sienna, warm ochre, the golden brown of caramelized sugar-yet there is nothing rustic or austere about their aesthetic. Instead, there is a deliberate decadence, a refusal to deny themselves or others the richness of sensory experience.

They are not materialistic in the hollow sense, but they understand the power of objects to evoke emotion. A well-loved teacup, a handwritten note, the weight of a linen napkin-these details matter because they transform the mundane into the sacred. Their philosophy is simple but profound: life is to be savored, not endured.

Relationships as Nourishment
To be loved by this person is to be cared for in ways both grand and subtle. They remember how you take your coffee, the book you mentioned wanting to read, the way you sigh when you’re tired. They are natural nurturers, not out of obligation but because giving affection is as vital to them as breathing. Their relationships are deep, often intense, because they do not believe in half-measures when it comes to love.

Yet this very strength contains its shadow. Their desire to envelop others can sometimes feel smothering; their need for closeness may be misinterpreted as neediness. They may struggle with boundaries, giving too much and then resenting the lack of reciprocity. Their warmth, so often their greatest gift, can become a furnace that others step back from, leaving them feeling unappreciated.

The Shadow of Indulgence
Their love of pleasure, while life-affirming, can tip into excess. They may overindulge-in food, in affection, in comfort-as a way to avoid confronting harsher truths. The sweetness they cultivate can become a shield against bitterness, leaving them ill-prepared for life’s inevitable disappointments. There is a risk of becoming stagnant, of mistaking comfort for growth.

Yet even in their flaws, there is something admirable: a refusal to harden, a commitment to softness in a world that often rewards detachment. They may falter, but they do not calcify.

The Lover’s Paradox
They are defined by the Lover archetype not merely because they seek pleasure, but because they believe in the transformative power of connection-to people, to beauty, to the tangible joys of existence. Their life is an argument against cynicism, a testament to the idea that warmth is not weakness.

But the Lover must beware: to love without restraint is to risk dissolution. Their challenge is to balance their generosity with self-preservation, to savor life without drowning in it. In this tension lies their evolution.

Fragrance as an Extension of Self
To wear Sweet Home by Hilde Soliani is to embrace a scent that is unabashedly comforting-vanilla, caramel, and toasted sugar wrapped in warmth. This is not a fragrance for those who wish to remain distant or enigmatic; it is for those who want to be enveloped, to draw others near, to create an atmosphere of indulgence and intimacy. The person who chooses this scent does not merely wear perfume-they embody it, allowing it to amplify their essence rather than mask it.

A Life of Sensory Richness
Their world is one of tactile pleasures, of textures and tastes, of spaces that feel lived-in and welcoming. Their home is likely filled with soft blankets, well-worn books, and the lingering aroma of freshly baked goods. They are drawn to deep, earthy colors-burnt sienna, warm ochre, the golden brown of caramelized sugar-yet there is nothing rustic or austere about their aesthetic. Instead, there is a deliberate decadence, a refusal to deny themselves or others the richness of sensory experience.

They are not materialistic in the hollow sense, but they understand the power of objects to evoke emotion. A well-loved teacup, a handwritten note, the weight of a linen napkin-these details matter because they transform the mundane into the sacred. Their philosophy is simple but profound: life is to be savored, not endured.

Relationships as Nourishment
To be loved by this person is to be cared for in ways both grand and subtle. They remember how you take your coffee, the book you mentioned wanting to read, the way you sigh when you’re tired. They are natural nurturers, not out of obligation but because giving affection is as vital to them as breathing. Their relationships are deep, often intense, because they do not believe in half-measures when it comes to love.

Yet this very strength contains its shadow. Their desire to envelop others can sometimes feel smothering; their need for closeness may be misinterpreted as neediness. They may struggle with boundaries, giving too much and then resenting the lack of reciprocity. Their warmth, so often their greatest gift, can become a furnace that others step back from, leaving them feeling unappreciated.

The Shadow of Indulgence
Their love of pleasure, while life-affirming, can tip into excess. They may overindulge-in food, in affection, in comfort-as a way to avoid confronting harsher truths. The sweetness they cultivate can become a shield against bitterness, leaving them ill-prepared for life’s inevitable disappointments. There is a risk of becoming stagnant, of mistaking comfort for growth.

Yet even in their flaws, there is something admirable: a refusal to harden, a commitment to softness in a world that often rewards detachment. They may falter, but they do not calcify.

The Lover’s Paradox
They are defined by the Lover archetype not merely because they seek pleasure, but because they believe in the transformative power of connection-to people, to beauty, to the tangible joys of existence. Their life is an argument against cynicism, a testament to the idea that warmth is not weakness.

But the Lover must beware: to love without restraint is to risk dissolution. Their challenge is to balance their generosity with self-preservation, to savor life without drowning in it. In this tension lies their evolution.