Volume Ii History In Drops
Fragrance Story
Volume II by History in Drops is a Aromatic fragrance for women and men. Volume II was launched in 2021. The nose behind this fragrance is Daniel Josier. Top notes are Pink Pepper, Chili Pepper and Bergamot; middle notes are Iris, Olibanum and Cistus Incanus; base notes are Patchouli, Vanilla and Musk.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Daniel Josier
Daniel Josier is a perfumer who created fragrances for both his own brand and Comporta Perfumes, including Areia Salgada and Sela. His own line features 1929 Eau De Parfum, Ambre Tabac, Bois D'iris, Casanova, Cuero Dela Toscana, and Golden Tuberose. He is known for rich, evocative scents.
Fragrance Notes
Character Profile
The Volume Ii Enthusiast Archetype: Portrait of Volume Ii History In Drops
Essence
At their core, this individual is a Sage-a seeker of wisdom, a curator of meaning, and a quiet observer of time’s passage. The fragrance Volume II History In Drops is not merely a scent to them; it is an olfactory manuscript, a distillation of memory and intellect. They are drawn to the weight of history, the subtlety of layered narratives, and the quiet authority of knowledge. Like the Sage, they believe truth is found in fragments, in the echoes of what has been, and they carry themselves with the poise of one who listens more than they speak.
Yet, the Sage’s shadow looms-dogmatism, detachment, and an over-reliance on the past. They may become so enamored with the archives of life that they forget to live in the present, or they may wield their knowledge as a shield against vulnerability.
Style & Aesthetic
Their wardrobe is a carefully composed anthology-structured yet understated, favoring textures that whisper rather than shout. Wool, linen, and aged leather dominate, each piece chosen for its patina, its suggestion of having witnessed something. They prefer muted tones: deep browns, slate grays, the faded blue of old ink. Their accessories are minimal but deliberate-a vintage watch, a well-worn notebook, perhaps a signet ring passed down through generations.
In scent, they gravitate toward complexity-notes of aged wood, dried herbs, and faintly smoky resins. Volume II appeals to them because it does not announce itself; it unfolds, revealing its layers only to those who linger.
Their home is a sanctuary of thought-bookshelves lined with well-thumbed volumes, a desk cluttered with handwritten notes, perhaps an antique globe or a collection of dried botanicals. They prefer slow mornings, strong coffee, and the ritual of reflection. Travel, when they undertake it, is deliberate-pilgrimages to ancient libraries, ruins, or perfumeries where tradition is preserved.
Professionally, they thrive in roles that demand patience and insight-historians, archivists, writers, perfumers, or even therapists. They disdain haste and superficiality, often to their own detriment, as the modern world rarely rewards their deliberate pace.
Philosophy & Values
They believe that nothing is truly new-only rediscovered, reinterpreted. History, to them, is not a dead thing but a living current, and they see themselves as its humble scribe. They value depth over immediacy, substance over spectacle. Their moral compass is guided by a sense of legacy-what will endure, what will be remembered.
Yet this reverence for the past can harden into nostalgia bordering on escapism. They may romanticize bygone eras, dismissing modernity as shallow, or they may struggle to let go of old wounds, preserving them like relics.
Relationships
They are not the life of the party, but the one you find in the corner, engaged in a conversation that feels like unearthing a buried text. They listen intently, collecting stories as others collect trinkets. Their friendships are few but profound-built on mutual respect for depth and authenticity.
Romantically, they are drawn to those who carry their own histories, who understand that love, like a fine fragrance, deepens with time. Yet their shadow may manifest as emotional reserve, an inability to fully surrender to the present moment. They may intellectualize feelings, treating them as artifacts to be studied rather than lived.
Shadow
The Sage’s greatest strength-their reverence for knowledge-can also be their prison. They may over-intellectualize pain, refusing to feel what they cannot first understand. Their detachment, meant to protect them from chaos, can isolate them from life’s raw, unscripted beauty.
To evolve, they must learn that wisdom is not only found in books or the past, but in the unguarded moment, the unplanned laugh, the scent of rain on pavement before it is named, analyzed, or preserved.