Style Pastels Tender Green Jil Sander

For Women
Eau de Toilette
Year: 2008
Moderate
Sillage
Moderate
Longevity
Spring
Best Season
Casual
Best For

Fragrance Story

Style Pastels Tender Green by Jil Sander is a Floral Green fragrance for women. Style Pastels Tender Green was launched in 2008. The nose behind this fragrance is Bernard Ellena.

Composition Profile

white floral 100%
green 85%
fresh 70%
citrus 60%
ozonic 50%
floral 40%

About the Perfumer

Bernard Ellena

Bernard Ellena

Bernard Ellena has created fragrances for a wide range of brands, including Beloved Woman for Amouage, Simply Her for Avon, Colors De Benetton and Tribu for Benetton, Eau De Paradis and L'eau By Vanessa Bruno for Biotherm, Madeleine for Brocard, and About Men for Bruno Banani. His portfolio demonstrates versatility across floral, fresh, and woody genres. Ellena's compositions are known for their clarity and elegant simplicity.

Fragrance Notes

All Notes

Complete scent profile

Tea Tea
Jasmine Jasmine
Bitter Orange Bitter Orange
Unique Character

Style Pastels Tender Green Jil Sander by Jil Sander 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

Style Pastels Tender Green Jil Sander embodies the distinctive style of Jil Sander while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.

Character Profile

The Innocent Archetype: Portrait of Style Pastels Tender Green Jil Sander

Essence

This person is most closely aligned with the Innocent archetype-a seeker of purity, simplicity, and harmony. The Innocent moves through life with an unshaken belief in goodness, drawn to the delicate and the understated. Their choice of Style Pastels Tender Green by Jil Sander reflects this: a fragrance that is fresh, subtle, and quietly luminous, like morning light through new leaves. It is not loud, not demanding, but lingers with a gentle persistence.

The Innocent does not crave grandeur or excess; they find beauty in restraint, in the spaces between things. Yet, beneath this softness lies a quiet resilience-a refusal to be hardened by the world. Their optimism is not naivety but a conscious choice to see possibility where others see only limitation.

Relationships

In relationships, they are attentive but never suffocating. They do not demand constant affirmation, nor do they offer it recklessly. Their love is steady, patient, like the slow unfurling of a fern. They attract those who are drawn to their calm, but they also frustrate those who mistake their quietude for detachment.

They are not the life of the party, but they are the one you seek when the noise becomes too much. Their presence is a sanctuary, though sometimes their reluctance to engage in conflict can leave issues unresolved. They would rather let a wound heal quietly than pick at its edges-a virtue that can become a flaw when avoidance replaces resolution.

Shadow

The Innocent’s greatest strength-their refusal to be corrupted by harshness-can also be their undoing. Their optimism, when unchecked, drifts into idealism, leaving them unprepared for life’s sharper turns. They may ignore problems, hoping they will dissolve on their own, or withdraw when faced with aggression rather than stand their ground.

Their distaste for excess can harden into a subtle judgment of those who indulge, a quiet superiority masked as simplicity. And their love of harmony can make them passive, allowing others to dictate their boundaries rather than asserting their own needs.

Conclusion

Their tastes are refined but never ostentatious. They prefer muted colors-soft greens, pale blues, warm neutrals-like the fragrance they wear. Their wardrobe is structured yet fluid, favoring natural fabrics that move with the body rather than constrain it. They appreciate craftsmanship but disdain extravagance; their luxury is in the unnoticed details-the stitching of a well-made garment, the weight of good paper.

Their philosophy is one of gentle resistance-against cynicism, against excess, against the hurried pace of modern life. They believe in the power of small acts: a handwritten note, a carefully prepared meal, the deliberate choice to listen rather than speak. They are not ascetics, but they reject the idea that more is always better.