Touberosa Il Profumiere
Fragrance Story
Touberosa by Il Profumiere is a fragrance for women and men. Touberosa was launched in 2021. The nose behind this fragrance is Massimiliano Torti. Top notes are Candied Fruits, Orange Blossom, Bergamot and Jasmine; middle notes are Tuberose, Freesia and Rose; base notes are Tuberose, Tonka Bean and Musk.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Massimiliano Torti
Massimiliano Torti is a perfumer for Il Profumiere, crafting a wide range of scents such as 10 O'clock, Albicocca Mallow, and Ambra Nera. His portfolio includes both light and dark compositions, from Ambroxine to Ambra Spirituale. He is known for balancing traditional and modern ingredients.
Fragrance Notes
Touberosa Il Profumiere by Il Profumiere 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.
Touberosa Il Profumiere embodies the distinctive style of Il Profumiere while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Tuberosa Enthusiast Archetype: Portrait of Touberosa Il Profumiere
Essence
To wear Tuberosa by Il Profumiere is to embrace a fragrance that is at once voluptuous and enigmatic-a scent that blooms in the twilight, heavy with narcotic sweetness yet threaded with something darker, almost primal. The person who chooses this fragrance is not one for half-measures; they are drawn to intensity, to the full spectrum of sensation, and to the mysteries that lie beneath the surface of polite society.
The dominant archetype here is The Lover-not in the trivial sense of romantic pursuit, but in the Jungian understanding of one who seeks unity through passion, beauty, and deep sensory engagement. This person lives through their senses, finding meaning in texture, scent, and the poetry of the physical world. Yet, as with all archetypes, there is a shadow: the Hedonist, who risks becoming lost in indulgence, mistaking sensation for substance.
Style & Aesthetic
Their tastes are decadent but deliberate. They prefer the richness of dark reds, deep purples, and the sheen of silk against skin. Their home is a sanctuary of tactile pleasures-velvet drapes, aged leather books, the faintest trace of incense lingering in the air. They are drawn to art that thrums with life: Caravaggio’s chiaroscuro, the lush despair of Baudelaire’s poetry, the slow burn of a Miles Davis trumpet solo.
Philosophically, they reject the sterile and the utilitarian. For them, beauty is not a luxury but a necessity, a counterbalance to the cold machinery of modern existence. They believe in the sacredness of pleasure, not as escapism but as a form of truth-a way to touch the divine.
They are not reckless, but neither are they restrained. Their life is a careful balance between indulgence and refinement-a midnight feast of ripe figs and dark chocolate, paired with a perfectly aged Bordeaux. They move through the world with a languid grace, yet there is always an undercurrent of hunger, of something unsated.
Their flaw lies in the temptation to drift into pure hedonism, to lose themselves in sensation until nothing remains but the echo of pleasure. The shadow whispers that more is always better-more intensity, more experience, more depth-until they risk drowning in their own desires.
Philosophy & Values
They see aesthetics as a form of resistance-against the mundane, the mass-produced, the soulless. They value authenticity, but not in the crude sense of "being oneself"; rather, they believe in crafting one’s existence as one would a work of art. Every choice-from the wine they drink to the words they speak-is deliberate, a refusal to surrender to the banal.
Yet this very idealism can curdle into elitism. Their disdain for the ordinary may harden into contempt, isolating them in a self-made world of exquisite loneliness.
Relationships
They do not love lightly. Their relationships are deep, consuming, and often fraught with intensity. They crave connection that is both emotional and visceral, seeking partners who are unafraid of passion’s darker currents. Yet this very depth can become their undoing-they may mistake obsession for love, or demand more than others can give. Their shadow emerges when desire turns possessive, when the need for union becomes a hunger that devours rather than nourishes.
Conclusion
Tuberosa is not a scent for the timid. It is for those who are unafraid of their own depths, who understand that beauty and decay are intertwined. The person who wears it is both poet and sensualist, philosopher and devotee of the flesh. Their strength is their capacity for rapture; their weakness, the abyss that opens when rapture becomes obsession.
In the end, they are a living paradox-a soul that worships at the altar of beauty, knowing full well that such devotion may one day consume them.