Tabac Nomade Houbigant

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

Fragrance Story

Tabac Nomade by Houbigant is a fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Tabac Nomade was launched in 2023. Tabac Nomade was created by Luca Maffei and Antoine Lie. Top notes are Spices, Rose and Bergamot; middle notes are Tobacco Leaf, Tonka Bean and Saffron; base notes are Vanilla and Leather.

Composition Profile

tobacco 100%
warm spicy 85%
vanilla 70%
sweet 60%
leather 50%
rose 40%
citrus 35%
amber 30%
aromatic 25%
metallic 20%

About the Perfumer

Antoine Lie

Antoine Lie

Antoine Lie is a French perfumer trained at Givaudan and known for his work with brands like Burberry and Avon. His style often blends bold contrasts, pairing fresh or woody accords with unexpected gourmand or metallic touches. He created the earthy, resinous Sequoia for Abbott New York City and the spicy, incense-laced Sword for CZAR, showcasing his skill with complex, atmospheric compositions.

Fragrance Notes

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Spices Spices
Rose Rose
Bergamot Bergamot

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Tobacco Leaf Tobacco Leaf
Tonka Bean Tonka Bean
Saffron Saffron

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Vanilla Vanilla
Leather Leather

Character Profile

The Tabac Nomade Wearer Archetype: Portrait of Tabac Nomade Houbigant

Essence

The person who chooses Tabac Nomade by Houbigant is not one to be confined by convention. Their essence aligns most closely with The Explorer, an archetype that thrives on the pursuit of the unknown, the sensual, and the untamed. Like the scent itself-a bold, smoky leather with whispers of spice and tobacco-they are a paradox of refinement and wildness. The Explorer seeks not just physical journeys but intellectual and emotional ones, driven by an insatiable curiosity and a refusal to settle into predictable rhythms.

Yet, like all archetypes, The Explorer has its shadow. The same restlessness that fuels their brilliance can lead to detachment, an inability to commit, or a tendency to romanticize the past at the expense of the present.

Philosophy & Values

They reject the superficial, the mass-produced, the disposable. For them, life must be lived with intensity, with an awareness of its fleeting nature. They are drawn to thinkers who challenge norms-Nietzsche, Camus, Baudelaire-because they see in them a kindred refusal to accept easy answers.

Their values are rooted in authenticity. They despise pretense, though they themselves may occasionally fall into the trap of affectation-a shadow of the Explorer’s tendency to mythologize their own experiences. They believe in the transformative power of beauty, but they are not naïve; they know that beauty often walks hand-in-hand with decay.

Relationships

They attract others effortlessly, their magnetism lying in their mystery. People are drawn to their stories, their air of having lived more deeply than most. But relationships with them are often transient, not out of cruelty but necessity-they fear stagnation more than loneliness.

When they do love, it is fiercely, but on their own terms. They demand freedom, sometimes at the cost of connection. Their partners must understand that they cannot be tied down, that their spirit is as restless as the wind. This can lead to a pattern of intense, short-lived romances, or a solitary existence punctuated by brief, luminous encounters.

Shadow

The darker side of the Explorer is a rootlessness that borders on exile. They may become so consumed by the pursuit of the next experience that they forget to live in the present. Nostalgia can be their poison-they romanticize past loves, past cities, past versions of themselves, to the point where the present feels inadequate.

There is also a danger of detachment, of observing life rather than living it. They may pride themselves on their independence, but isolation can corrode even the strongest spirit. Without grounding, they risk becoming a ghost in their own story, always searching, never arriving.

Conclusion

Their tastes are an extension of their philosophy: they prefer the rare, the storied, the things that carry the weight of history. A well-worn leather jacket, a first-edition book, a vintage watch-these are not mere possessions but talismans of experience. They are drawn to places where time feels layered: dimly lit jazz bars, old libraries, foreign cities at dusk.

Their style is deliberate but never contrived. They might wear a tailored coat over a slightly rumpled shirt, as if they’ve just returned from an adventure. There is an effortless elegance to them, a refusal to be overly polished. They understand that true sophistication lies in subtlety, in the way smoke lingers in the air long after the fire has died.