The Soft Lawn Imaginary Authors

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2012
Moderate
Sillage
Moderate
Longevity
Spring
Best Season
Casual
Best For

Fragrance Story

The Soft Lawn by Imaginary Authors is a Aromatic Green fragrance for women and men. The Soft Lawn was launched in 2012. The nose behind this fragrance is Josh Meyer.

Composition Profile

yellow floral 100%
green 85%
earthy 70%
tennis ball 60%
aromatic 50%
woody 40%
fresh spicy 35%
sweet 30%
mossy 25%
camphor 20%

About the Perfumer

Josh Meyer

Josh Meyer

Josh Meyer founded Imaginary Authors and Dasein, creating fragrances such as A City On Fire, Winter Green, and A Whiff Of Waffle Cone. He also composed L.A. She Called But He Was Unreachable for Anthropologie. Meyer is known for his narrative-driven, evocative scents.

Fragrance Notes

All Notes

Complete scent profile

Lime (Linden) Blossom Lime (Linden) Blossom
Tennis Ball Tennis Ball
Laurels Laurels
Vetiver Vetiver
Oakmoss Oakmoss
Ivy Ivy
Unique Character

The Soft Lawn Imaginary Authors by Imaginary Authors offers a distinctive olfactory experience that stands out from other fragrances in its category.

Artisanal Creation

Crafted with the finest ingredients and a blend of traditional and modern perfumery techniques, this fragrance represents the pinnacle of the perfumer's art.

Signature Style

The Soft Lawn Imaginary Authors embodies the distinctive style of Imaginary Authors while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.

Character Profile

The Lover Archetype: Portrait of The Soft Lawn Imaginary Authors

Essence

The Essence of Their Being

To wear The Soft Lawn by Imaginary Authors is to embrace nostalgia as a living force-a scent that conjures the crispness of freshly cut grass, the warmth of sunlit skin, and the faintest whisper of tennis balls and ivy. This is not a fragrance for those who seek the dark or the decadent; it is for the one who finds beauty in simplicity, joy in fleeting moments, and meaning in the uncomplicated. They are, at their core, the Innocent Archetype-forever chasing the purity of an idealized past, a golden hour that never fades.

Their Worldview and Philosophy

Life, for them, is best lived as a series of small, perfect instants-the first sip of lemonade on a summer afternoon, the sound of laughter in an empty park, the way sunlight filters through leaves. They reject cynicism as a kind of spiritual poverty, preferring instead to believe in kindness, in the goodness of people, in the possibility of happiness untainted by irony. Their philosophy is not naive, but deliberate-a conscious choice to see the world through a lens of optimism, even when reality threatens to darken the edges.

Yet, this very idealism is their double-edged sword. They may cling too tightly to the past, refusing to acknowledge life’s inevitable complexities. Their shadow lurks in the refusal to grow-to accept that innocence, once lost, cannot be reclaimed, only transformed.

Aesthetic and Style

Their wardrobe is an ode to effortless charm-linen shirts slightly wrinkled, well-worn sneakers, a vintage tennis sweater thrown over the shoulders. They favor muted greens, soft whites, and faded blues, colors that evoke open skies and lazy afternoons. Their home is filled with well-loved books, mismatched ceramics, and the faint scent of lavender lingering in the air. They are drawn to art that captures ephemeral beauty-Impressionist paintings, haiku poetry, the quiet melancholy of a vinyl record spinning at dusk.

But beneath this curated ease lies a fear of messiness, of disorder. They may avoid bold colors or avant-garde designs not out of disdain, but because they threaten the delicate balance of their aesthetic sanctuary.

Relationships and Social Life

They are the friend who remembers birthdays with handwritten notes, who brings homemade cookies to gatherings, who listens with genuine warmth. People are drawn to their sincerity, their ability to make even the most mundane moments feel special. In love, they are tender and devoted, though they may idealize their partners, projecting onto them an impossible purity.

Yet, their shadow emerges when disillusionment strikes. If a friend betrays them or a lover proves flawed, they may retreat into wounded silence, mourning not the person, but the lost fantasy of what they believed them to be. Forgiveness does not come easily, not because they are cruel, but because their heart clings to the way things should have been.

Lifestyle and Habits

Mornings begin with tea in a chipped porcelain cup, evenings with a slow walk through the neighborhood. They prefer picnics to parties, bookshops to bars. Routine is sacred to them-not out of rigidity, but because ritual preserves the magic in ordinary things. They may garden, not with the precision of a landscaper, but with the whimsy of someone who plants flowers simply because they are pretty.

But this idyllic rhythm can become a cage. When life demands adaptation-when storms flatten their garden, when a loved one falls ill-they may falter, struggling to reconcile their vision of harmony with the chaos of existence.

The Light and The Shadow

In their light, they are a reminder that joy need not be complicated-that beauty exists in the way light catches dust motes, in the sound of a child’s laughter, in the scent of grass after rain. They teach others to pause, to savor, to believe in sweetness.

In their shadow, they risk becoming prisoners of their own nostalgia, forever chasing a past that never was, unable to embrace the imperfect present. Their greatest challenge is not to abandon their optimism, but to deepen it-to find grace not only in the pristine, but in the flawed, the broken, the real.

Conclusion: The Eternal Seeker of Gentle Truths

They are neither naive nor childish, but rather a soul who has chosen to see the world as something worth loving. The Soft Lawn is their anthem-a fragrance that does not shout, but whispers of sunlight and memory. And though their journey may be marked by moments of sorrow, when the weight of reality presses too hard, they will always return to the scent of grass, the warmth of the sun, the belief that somewhere, innocence still exists-if only in fleeting, fragrant traces.

Conclusion

The Essence of Their Being

To wear The Soft Lawn by Imaginary Authors is to embrace nostalgia as a living force-a scent that conjures the crispness of freshly cut grass, the warmth of sunlit skin, and the faintest whisper of tennis balls and ivy. This is not a fragrance for those who seek the dark or the decadent; it is for the one who finds beauty in simplicity, joy in fleeting moments, and meaning in the uncomplicated. They are, at their core, the Innocent Archetype-forever chasing the purity of an idealized past, a golden hour that never fades.

Their Worldview and Philosophy

Life, for them, is best lived as a series of small, perfect instants-the first sip of lemonade on a summer afternoon, the sound of laughter in an empty park, the way sunlight filters through leaves. They reject cynicism as a kind of spiritual poverty, preferring instead to believe in kindness, in the goodness of people, in the possibility of happiness untainted by irony. Their philosophy is not naive, but deliberate-a conscious choice to see the world through a lens of optimism, even when reality threatens to darken the edges.

Yet, this very idealism is their double-edged sword. They may cling too tightly to the past, refusing to acknowledge life’s inevitable complexities. Their shadow lurks in the refusal to grow-to accept that innocence, once lost, cannot be reclaimed, only transformed.

Aesthetic and Style

Their wardrobe is an ode to effortless charm-linen shirts slightly wrinkled, well-worn sneakers, a vintage tennis sweater thrown over the shoulders. They favor muted greens, soft whites, and faded blues, colors that evoke open skies and lazy afternoons. Their home is filled with well-loved books, mismatched ceramics, and the faint scent of lavender lingering in the air. They are drawn to art that captures ephemeral beauty-Impressionist paintings, haiku poetry, the quiet melancholy of a vinyl record spinning at dusk.

But beneath this curated ease lies a fear of messiness, of disorder. They may avoid bold colors or avant-garde designs not out of disdain, but because they threaten the delicate balance of their aesthetic sanctuary.

Relationships and Social Life

They are the friend who remembers birthdays with handwritten notes, who brings homemade cookies to gatherings, who listens with genuine warmth. People are drawn to their sincerity, their ability to make even the most mundane moments feel special. In love, they are tender and devoted, though they may idealize their partners, projecting onto them an impossible purity.

Yet, their shadow emerges when disillusionment strikes. If a friend betrays them or a lover proves flawed, they may retreat into wounded silence, mourning not the person, but the lost fantasy of what they believed them to be. Forgiveness does not come easily, not because they are cruel, but because their heart clings to the way things should have been.

Lifestyle and Habits

Mornings begin with tea in a chipped porcelain cup, evenings with a slow walk through the neighborhood. They prefer picnics to parties, bookshops to bars. Routine is sacred to them-not out of rigidity, but because ritual preserves the magic in ordinary things. They may garden, not with the precision of a landscaper, but with the whimsy of someone who plants flowers simply because they are pretty.

But this idyllic rhythm can become a cage. When life demands adaptation-when storms flatten their garden, when a loved one falls ill-they may falter, struggling to reconcile their vision of harmony with the chaos of existence.

The Light and The Shadow

In their light, they are a reminder that joy need not be complicated-that beauty exists in the way light catches dust motes, in the sound of a child’s laughter, in the scent of grass after rain. They teach others to pause, to savor, to believe in sweetness.

In their shadow, they risk becoming prisoners of their own nostalgia, forever chasing a past that never was, unable to embrace the imperfect present. Their greatest challenge is not to abandon their optimism, but to deepen it-to find grace not only in the pristine, but in the flawed, the broken, the real.

Conclusion: The Eternal Seeker of Gentle Truths

They are neither naive nor childish, but rather a soul who has chosen to see the world as something worth loving. The Soft Lawn is their anthem-a fragrance that does not shout, but whispers of sunlight and memory. And though their journey may be marked by moments of sorrow, when the weight of reality presses too hard, they will always return to the scent of grass, the warmth of the sun, the belief that somewhere, innocence still exists-if only in fleeting, fragrant traces.