Gio Antonelli Intenso Jequiti
Fragrance Story
Gio Antonelli Intenso by Jequiti is a Oriental fragrance for women. Gio Antonelli Intenso was launched in 2021. The nose behind this fragrance is Carmita Magalhães. Top notes are Sour Cherry, Ginger and Peony; middle notes are Jasmine and Gardenia; base notes are Vetiver and Ambroxan.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Carmita Magalhães
Carmita Magalhães is a perfumer who has created fragrances for Ana Hickmann, Avon, and CIEL Parfum. Her work includes Gold In Shadow and Summer Paradise for Ana Hickmann. She also developed scents like Arc-en-ciel Halloween for CIEL Parfum.
Fragrance Notes
Gio Antonelli Intenso Jequiti by Jequiti 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.
Gio Antonelli Intenso Jequiti embodies the distinctive style of Jequiti while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Gio Antonelli Intenso Jequiti
Essence
This person is defined by the Lover archetype, a figure who seeks beauty, passion, and deep connection in all things. The Lover does not merely exist-they experience, with an intensity that borders on the devotional. Gio Antonelli Intenso Jequiti, with its bold, sensual composition, becomes their olfactory signature: a fragrance that is warm, magnetic, and unapologetically present.
Shadow
Where there is devotion, there is also the risk of obsession. The Lover’s shadow emerges when their hunger for beauty becomes insatiable, when they chase sensation not for joy but to fill an unfillable void. They may lose themselves in hedonism, mistaking intensity for meaning.
They are also prone to a subtle vanity-not the crude narcissism of self-obsession, but a deeper fixation on how they are perceived. They want to be remembered, to leave an imprint. This can lead to a performative quality, a fear of being ordinary.
Conclusion
At their best, they are a reminder that life is meant to be felt, not just endured. They teach others to pause, to savor, to love without reservation. At their worst, they risk becoming prisoners of their own desires, mistaking passion for purpose.
But even in their flaws, there is something admirable-a refusal to live half-heartedly. They would rather burn brightly than fade into the background. And in the end, that is their greatest gift: the courage to desire deeply, even when desire is dangerous.