Spanish Carnation History Parfums

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2023
Strong
Sillage
Very Good
Longevity
Fall
Best Season
Evening
Best For

Fragrance Story

Spanish Carnation by History Parfums is a fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Spanish Carnation was launched in 2023. Top notes are Corn and Exotic Fruits; middle notes are Carnation and Lily-of-the-Valley; base notes are Vanilla, Amber, Carnation leaves and White Musk.

Composition Profile

vanilla 100%
amber 85%
warm spicy 70%
powdery 60%
floral 50%
musky 40%
aromatic 35%
sweet 30%
fruity 25%
animalic 20%

About the Perfumer

Unknown Perfumer

Fragrance Notes

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Corn Corn
Exotic Fruits Exotic Fruits

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Carnation Carnation
Lily-of-the-Valley Lily-of-the-Valley

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Vanilla Vanilla
Amber Amber
Carnation leaves Carnation leaves
White Musk White Musk

Character Profile

The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Spanish Carnation History Parfums

Essence

To wear Spanish Carnation by Histoire de Parfums is to embrace a fragrance that is at once opulent and restrained-a paradox of fiery spice and velvety warmth. The person who chooses this scent is drawn to its duality: the carnation’s peppery vibrance, the clove’s smoldering depth, and the honeyed sweetness that lingers like a whispered secret. They are, in essence, an embodiment of The Lover archetype-one who seeks beauty, passion, and connection in all things, yet is also haunted by the specter of excess, indulgence, and the fleeting nature of desire.

Philosophy & Values

For them, truth is found in beauty, and beauty is found in intensity. They reject the mundane, the half-lived life, the compromises made in the name of practicality. Their philosophy is one of immersion-whether in art, love, or intellectual pursuit, they demand depth. They are drawn to the Romantics, to Rilke’s Letters to a Young Poet, to the idea that passion is the highest form of intelligence.

Yet this very idealism can become their undoing. They disdain the ordinary, sometimes to the point of self-sabotage-dismissing stable relationships as "boring," abandoning projects when the initial thrill fades, chasing after ever-new sensations like a moth drawn to flame. Their shadow whispers: Nothing will ever be enough.

Relationships

In love, they are both muse and artist. They do not merely fall for others-they curate them, drawn to those who mirror their own depth and intensity. Their romances are operatic, full of whispered confessions at midnight and stormy reconciliations. They adore with abandon, but their love is not unconditional-it demands reciprocity, a shared devotion to the grand and the poetic.

Yet here, too, lies their flaw: they mistake drama for depth. They may grow restless when the initial intoxication fades, mistaking comfort for stagnation. Their shadow is a hunger that can never be sated, a fear that beneath the passion, there is only emptiness.

Shadow

The Lover, when unbalanced, becomes the Hedonist-one who mistakes sensation for meaning. They may lose themselves in the pursuit of pleasure, numbing their existential dread with ever-greater thrills. Their disdain for the mundane can render them incapable of enduring life’s necessary banalities: paying bills on time, maintaining long-term commitments, sitting with stillness.

And yet, this very shadow is what makes them human. Their excesses are born from a refusal to live half-heartedly, a rebellion against the numbness of modern existence. Their challenge is not to temper their passion, but to direct it-to learn that true depth is found not just in ecstasy, but in the quiet moments between.

Conclusion

The lover of Spanish Carnation is a creature of fire-warm, radiant, but capable of burning too brightly. They remind us that life is not merely to be lived, but to be devoured. Yet their greatest lesson lies in the balance they must seek: to love without losing themselves, to seek beauty without dismissing the ordinary, to burn-but not to ash.