Cacao Timur La Closerie Des Parfums
Fragrance Story
Cacao Timur by La Closerie des Parfums is a Oriental Spicy fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Cacao Timur was launched in 2025. The nose behind this fragrance is Celine Perdriel. Top notes are Timur, Grapefruit, Ginger, Blood Orange and Lime; middle notes are Cacao, Jasmine Sambac and Freesia; base notes are Amberwood, Patchouli, Tonka Bean and Haitian Vetiver.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Celine Perdriel
Celine Perdriel is a French perfumer known for her work with Atelier Materi, where she has created scents like Ambre Papier and Cuir Nilam. Her portfolio also includes the fresh Cèdre Figalia and the floral Rose Ardoise. She has additionally crafted fragrances for Faberlic and Good Water Perfume, demonstrating a range from woody to aquatic notes.
Fragrance Notes
Cacao Timur La Closerie Des Parfums by La Closerie des Parfums 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.
Cacao Timur La Closerie Des Parfums embodies the distinctive style of La Closerie des Parfums while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Cacao Timur La Closerie Des Parfums
Essence
This person is most closely aligned with The Lover archetype-a seeker of intensity, sensuality, and profound emotional connections. The Lover does not merely experience life; they consume it, savoring textures, scents, and emotions with an almost devotional fervor. Cacao Timur, with its dark, velvety cocoa, smoky woods, and a touch of spice, mirrors their essence: rich, complex, and unapologetically indulgent.
Yet, like all archetypes, The Lover has a shadow-an undercurrent of obsession, a tendency to lose themselves in pleasure or passion, and a vulnerability to excess. Their strength is their depth of feeling; their weakness is their inability to remain detached when the world demands it.
Relationships
They do not love lightly. Their relationships are deep, consuming, and often complicated. They crave connection that transcends the mundane-conversations that last until dawn, touches that feel like promises. Yet this intensity can be overwhelming. Some find them too much-too passionate, too demanding, too unwilling to settle for the ordinary.
Their friendships are few but fiercely loyal. They despise small talk, preferring silence to empty words. When they trust, they trust completely, but betrayal cuts them more deeply than most. They are the kind of person who remembers every wound but forgives more often than they should-because to hold a grudge would be to deny the depth of their own capacity for feeling.
Shadow
The Lover’s greatest flaw is their tendency to blur the line between devotion and obsession. They can become lost in their desires-whether for a person, an experience, or an ideal. When disappointed, they do not simply move on; they dissect the loss, turning it over in their mind like a bitter spice they cannot stop tasting.
They may also struggle with indulgence-whether in pleasure, luxury, or emotion. What begins as appreciation can tip into excess: too much wine, too many late nights, too much time dwelling on what could have been. Their challenge is to love without drowning in it-to savor without losing themselves.
Conclusion
Their tastes are decadent but refined-dark chocolate with sea salt, aged rum, the weight of linen against skin. They prefer textures that tell a story: worn leather, rough-hewn wood, the slight bitterness of black coffee left to cool. Their style is tactile, layered, never sterile. They might wear deep burgundies, charcoal grays, or midnight blues-colors that suggest mystery rather than announce it.
Philosophically, they reject the superficial. They believe in the transformative power of beauty, but not the kind that fades. For them, beauty must have weight, history, a hint of melancholy. They are drawn to art that lingers-Baroque music, chiaroscuro paintings, poetry that aches. They do not seek happiness so much as meaning, and they find it in the interplay of pleasure and pain.