Lupin & Patchouli Jo Malone London
Fragrance Story
Lupin & Patchouli by Jo Malone London is a Chypre Floral fragrance for women and men. Lupin & Patchouli was launched in 2019. Lupin & Patchouli was created by Yann Vasnier and Louise Turner.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Louise Turner
Louise Turner is a British perfumer known for her work with major fragrance houses. She created several iconic scents for Carolina Herrera, including Good Girl and Bad Boy, as well as their limited editions. Her portfolio also includes Azzaro Pour Homme Naughty Leather. Turner's compositions often balance bold, modern accords with refined elegance.
Fragrance Notes
Character Profile
The Sage Archetype: Portrait of Lupin & Patchouli Jo Malone London
Essence
A person drawn to Lupin & Patchouli by Jo Malone London is not one who seeks the obvious. The fragrance-earthy yet refined, wild yet controlled-mirrors a mind that thrives in the interplay of shadow and light. They are, at their core, a Sage, an archetype defined by wisdom, introspection, and a quiet but relentless pursuit of truth.
This is not the wisdom of dusty tomes alone, but the kind that comes from keen observation-of people, of nature, of the unseen currents beneath the surface. They move through life with a deliberate grace, their presence neither loud nor meek, but assured. Their thoughts are deep, often unspoken, yet when they speak, their words carry weight.
Style & Aesthetic
Their style is understated but intentional. They favor textures that tell a story-soft wool, worn leather, linen that breathes with time. Their wardrobe is a study in muted tones, punctuated occasionally by a deep burgundy or an unexpected olive green, much like the fragrance they adore: earthy, layered, never garish.
In art and music, they are drawn to works that demand engagement-minimalist compositions with hidden depths, abstract paintings that reveal new forms upon each viewing. They prefer a quiet café to a crowded bar, a forest path to a bustling street. Their home is a sanctuary: bookshelves lined with philosophy and poetry, a single vase holding wildflowers, the scent of patchouli lingering in the air like an unspoken thought.
They are not driven by ambition in the traditional sense. Their success is measured in understanding, not accolades. They might be a writer, a researcher, a gardener, a therapist-any vocation that allows them to explore the unseen layers of existence.
They thrive in routine but are not bound by it. A morning walk, a cup of black coffee, the slow unfurling of ideas-these are their rituals. Yet they are not rigid. They understand that life is flux, and they adapt with quiet resilience.
Philosophy & Values
They believe in the power of knowledge, but not in the way of the pedant. For them, wisdom is not about accumulation but discernment. They distrust dogma, preferring instead to question, to probe, to hold contradictions in tension. Their guiding principle might be Nietzsche’s own: "One must still have chaos in oneself to give birth to a dancing star."
They value authenticity above all else-not the performative kind, but the quiet integrity of being fully oneself. They have little patience for superficiality, though they are too perceptive to dismiss it outright. Instead, they observe, they analyze, they understand-even if they do not always forgive.
Relationships
In love and friendship, they are slow to trust but deeply loyal once they do. They do not give their affection lightly, nor do they seek constant validation. Their relationships are built on mutual respect, intellectual exchange, and a shared appreciation for the unspoken.
Yet here lies their shadow: their introspection can become isolation. Their need for depth may make them impatient with those who do not meet their standards, and their tendency to observe rather than engage can leave others feeling unseen. They may retreat too often into their own mind, mistaking solitude for wisdom when, at times, it is merely avoidance.
Shadow
Every strength has its dark twin. Their keen perception can curdle into skepticism, their love of truth into a disdain for those who do not share it. They may mistake their own insights for infallibility, growing quietly arrogant in their certainty.
At their worst, they withdraw completely, becoming the detached observer rather than the engaged participant. They may forget that wisdom, if not tempered by compassion, is merely cleverness in disguise.
To love Lupin & Patchouli is to embrace the tension between wildness and refinement, between knowing and questioning. The Sage within them is both their greatest strength and their most subtle trap. Yet if they remember that wisdom is not a destination but a journey-one best walked with both curiosity and humility-they will find not just knowledge, but true understanding.
And in that understanding, they may yet discover the rarest fragrance of all: the scent of a life fully lived.