Vanille 44 Paris Le Labo

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2007
Strong
Sillage
Excellent
Longevity
Fall
Best Season
Evening
Best For

Fragrance Story

Vanille 44 Paris by Le Labo is a Woody fragrance for women and men. Vanille 44 Paris was launched in 2007. The nose behind this fragrance is Alberto Morillas.

Composition Profile

vanilla 100%
woody 85%
smoky 70%
amber 60%
balsamic 50%
powdery 40%
citrus 35%
warm spicy 30%
aldehydic 25%
sweet 20%

About the Perfumer

Alberto Morillas

Alberto Morillas

Alberto Morillas is a master perfumer based in Geneva, Switzerland, and a longtime collaborator with Firmenich. His style is known for refined, luminous compositions that balance natural elegance with modern clarity. He created the bold leather and spice of Amouage Opus VII - Reckless Leather, the fresh citrus depth of Acqua di Parma Colonia Intensa, and the woody warmth of Aedes de Venustas Palissandre D'or. His work has shaped contemporary perfumery across both niche and luxury houses.

Fragrance Notes

All Notes

Complete scent profile

Vanilla Vanilla
Incense Incense
Guaiac Wood Guaiac Wood
Aldehydes Aldehydes
Mandarin Orange Mandarin Orange
Bergamot Bergamot

Character Profile

The Nurturer Archetype: Portrait of Vanille 44 Paris Le Labo

Essence

To wear Vanille 44 Paris by Le Labo is to embrace warmth as both a refuge and a declaration. This fragrance-deep, enveloping, subtly smoky yet sweet-suggests a soul who seeks to comfort and be comforted, who builds sanctuaries out of scent and presence. The wearer is not merely drawn to vanilla’s familiarity; they are drawn to its mythic quality, its ability to evoke hearth and home while hinting at something darker, more complex beneath the surface.

At their core, this person embodies the Nurturer archetype, a figure who thrives on connection, care, and the quiet power of emotional sustenance. They are the one who remembers birthdays, who brings homemade pastries to gatherings, who listens with an almost preternatural patience. Their philosophy is rooted in the belief that tenderness is strength-that the world is softened, made more bearable, through small acts of kindness.

Their tastes reflect this: they prefer understated elegance over ostentation, favoring natural textures, warm neutrals, and well-worn leather. Their home is a carefully curated space-not sterile, but lived-in, with books stacked haphazardly, a record player always within reach, and candles burning low. They are drawn to art that speaks of intimacy-Impressionist paintings, jazz that feels like a late-night confession, poetry that lingers in the air like smoke.

Shadow

Yet, like vanilla itself-which can cloy if overused-their nurturing instinct has its shadows. Their need to care can slip into control, their generosity into subtle manipulation. They may grow resentful when their kindness is not reciprocated, though they will seldom admit it. Their home, their scent, their very presence can become a gilded cage-a place so comfortable that others forget to leave, or so suffocating that they must escape.

They fear being taken for granted, yet they also fear not being needed. Their greatest existential dread is irrelevance-the thought that their warmth might go unnoticed, that their efforts might dissolve into the background like a fading scent. This fear can make them cling, or worse, martyr themselves in silence, nurturing until it becomes self-negation.

Conclusion

Their greatest strength is their ability to make others feel seen. They are not merely polite; they are genuinely attuned to the emotional undercurrents of a room. In relationships, they are steadfast, the kind of partner or friend who remains when others leave, who offers not solutions but presence. Their love is not loud-it is in the way they refill your glass without asking, the way they remember how you take your coffee.

Professionally, they gravitate toward roles that allow them to care-teaching, counseling, hospitality, or creative fields where they can shape environments that feel welcoming. They are not driven by ambition in the traditional sense; their fulfillment comes from the quiet satisfaction of making things better, even if only in small ways.