Immortal Beloved House Of Cherry Bomb
Fragrance Story
Immortal Beloved by House of Cherry Bomb is a Chypre Floral fragrance for women and men. Immortal Beloved was launched in 2016. Immortal Beloved was created by Alexis Karl and Maria McElroy. Top notes are Tobacco Blossom, Lily-of-the-Valley and Henna; middle notes are Ambergris, Labdanum and Vanilla; base notes are Agarwood (Oud) and Beeswax.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Alexis Karl
Alexis Karl is an independent perfumer and the founder of the House of Cherry Bomb and Scent by Alexis. Known for bold, narrative-driven compositions, she often blends dark, gourmand, and botanical notes to create evocative scents. Her catalog includes fragrances like Immortal Beloved, Pink Haze, and Black Magick, which showcase her signature balance of intensity and intimacy.
Fragrance Notes
Immortal Beloved House Of Cherry Bomb by House of Cherry Bomb 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.
Immortal Beloved House Of Cherry Bomb embodies the distinctive style of House of Cherry Bomb while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Immortal Beloved House Of Cherry Bomb
Essence
To wear Immortal Beloved by House of Cherry Bomb is to embrace a scent that is both sacred and profane-a fragrance of deep roses, smoky incense, and dark leather, evoking passion, devotion, and a touch of the forbidden. The person who chooses this perfume is not merely drawn to its scent but to what it signifies: a life lived with intensity, sensuality, and a hunger for the sublime. They are, at their core, a Lover-one of Jung’s most magnetic and complex archetypes.
The Lover does not merely exist; they feel, they desire, they consume and are consumed in turn. Their world is one of heightened sensation, where beauty is not just observed but worshipped, where love is not just given but sacrificed to. They are drawn to the poetic, the romantic, the tragic-not out of mere sentimentality, but because they recognize that life’s deepest truths are found in ecstasy and longing.
Style & Aesthetic
Their tastes are decadent but deliberate. They surround themselves with objects that stir the soul: antique books with gilded edges, velvet drapes that catch the light just so, a record player spinning Chopin or Nick Cave. Their wardrobe is a carefully curated mix of vintage elegance and modern edge-lace and leather, silk and steel. They do not follow trends; they follow impulse, the pull of what feels true in the moment.
Philosophically, they reject the mundane in favor of the mythic. They see love as the highest form of art, and relationships as sacred contracts between souls. Their values are rooted in authenticity-not in the shallow sense of "being oneself," but in the deeper, more dangerous sense of surrendering to one’s nature. They believe in passion as a guiding force, even when it leads to ruin.
Shadow
Yet, like all archetypes, the Lover has a dark side-one that emerges when passion curdles into possession, when devotion becomes delusion. Their greatest strength-their capacity for feeling-can also be their downfall. They are prone to extremes: love that borders on obsession, pleasure that verges on self-destruction.
They may struggle with jealousy, not out of pettiness, but because they cannot fathom love without totality. If betrayed, they do not merely walk away-they burn bridges, drown in bitterness, or worse, cling to a dying flame long after it has turned to ash. Their pursuit of beauty can become hedonism; their search for meaning can spiral into existential despair.
At their worst, they are melodramatic, self-indulgent, even manipulative-using their emotional depth as a weapon rather than a gift. They may mistake intensity for intimacy, believing that suffering is proof of love.
The Lover is both blessed and cursed by their own sensitivity. They feel more deeply than most, which grants them unparalleled richness of experience but also leaves them vulnerable to heartbreak. Their challenge is to temper their fire with wisdom-to love without losing themselves, to desire without drowning in it.
They are not for the faint of heart. To know them is to be swept into their world, where every moment is charged with meaning, where love is both salvation and sacrifice. They are the poets, the dreamers, the ones who would rather burn out than fade away-and in their flames, they leave an indelible mark on those who dare to get close.
In the end, they are immortal not because they live forever, but because they refuse to live half-heartedly. Their legacy is written in roses and smoke-a fragrance that lingers long after they are gone.
Conclusion
In their brightest form, they are magnetic, capable of making others feel truly seen. Their presence is intoxicating-not because they perform charm, but because they embody it. They listen with their whole being, their gaze intense, their words weighted with meaning. They inspire devotion because they themselves are devoted-to beauty, to truth, to the people they love.
Their relationships are deep, often transformative. They do not love lightly; when they commit, it is with a fierceness that can be overwhelming. They are the kind of lover who writes letters in the middle of the night, who remembers anniversaries not out of obligation but because the passage of time is sacred to them. Their friendships are equally intense-lifelong bonds forged in shared epiphanies, late-night confessions, and mutual reverence for the mysteries of existence.