Dorian's Spleen L'entropiste

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2025
Strong
Sillage
Very Good
Longevity
Fall, Winter
Best Season
Evening, Special Occasion
Best For

Fragrance Story

Dorian's Spleen by L'Entropiste is a Oriental Vanilla fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Dorian's Spleen was launched in 2025. The nose behind this fragrance is Bertrand Duchaufour.

Composition Profile

warm spicy 100%
whiskey 85%
smoky 70%
woody 60%
coffee 50%
chocolate 40%
sweet 35%
caramel 30%

About the Perfumer

Bertrand Duchaufour

Bertrand Duchaufour

Bertrand Duchaufour is a renowned French perfumer with a prolific career spanning many brands. He has created fragrances for Acqua di Parma, including Blu Mediterraneo - Cipresso Di Toscana and Colonia Assoluta, as well as for Aedes de Venustas, such as Café Tabac and Copal Azur. His style is known for its complexity and use of natural ingredients.

Fragrance Notes

All Notes

Complete scent profile

Whiskey Whiskey
Dark Chocolate Dark Chocolate
Spices Spices
Coffee Coffee
Smoke Smoke
Caramel Caramel
Ash Ash
Unique Character

Dorian's Spleen L'entropiste by L'Entropiste 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

Dorian's Spleen L'entropiste embodies the distinctive style of L'Entropiste while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.

Character Profile

The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Dorian's Spleen L'entropiste

Essence

To wear Dorian’s Spleen L’Entropiste is to embrace contradiction-a fragrance that is at once opulent and decaying, intoxicating yet unsettling. The person who chooses this scent is not one for simple pleasures or unambiguous truths. They are drawn to the liminal, the places where beauty and decay intertwine, where the sacred and profane blur into something unrecognizable yet deeply familiar. Their soul is that of the Alchemist, the archetype of transformation, who seeks to transmute the base into the sublime, the mundane into the mythic.

Style & Aesthetic

Their wardrobe is a carefully constructed paradox-antique lace paired with modern minimalism, or sleek tailoring disrupted by a single unsettling detail. They favor textures that evoke both luxury and ruin: velvet that has known too many hands, leather that has begun to crack, silver tarnished just enough to suggest history.

In art, they are drawn to the Symbolists, the Pre-Raphaelites, or the darker edges of Romanticism-works that blur the line between dream and nightmare. Their music might be the haunting compositions of Arvo Pärt, the decadent excess of early Bowie, or the eerie whispers of Coil. They do not consume culture passively; they interrogate it, seeking the hidden alchemy beneath the surface.

Their home is a temple of controlled chaos-antique apothecary bottles filled with mysterious liquids, shelves of esoteric books, a single black rose preserved under glass. They may dabble in the occult, not out of superstition, but as a symbolic language for their inner transformations. They are drawn to cities with layers of history-Venice, Prague, New Orleans-places where the past is not dead but seeps through the cracks in the present.

Professionally, they thrive in roles that allow them to shape reality-artists, perfumers, writers, or even scientists working at the edges of the unknown. Routine is their enemy; they would rather burn out than rust.

Philosophy & Values

This person does not merely exist-they curate their existence. Their philosophy is one of metamorphosis, a belief that life is not fixed but fluid, that identity is not a prison but a crucible. They reject the notion of a stable, unchanging self, instead viewing personality as an ever-shifting experiment. Their values are aesthetic before they are moral; they prize depth, intensity, and the sublime over comfort or convention.

They are drawn to the works of Baudelaire, Bataille, and perhaps even Crowley-writers who understood that beauty is not always kind, that truth is often grotesque. They see the world as a text to be interpreted, a riddle to be unraveled, and they are both the scholar and the subject of their own study.

Relationships

To love them is to be drawn into their experiment. They do not seek partners so much as collaborators in their endless self-reinvention. Their relationships are intense, often fleeting, because permanence frightens them-it suggests stagnation, the antithesis of their philosophy. They are magnetic, capable of making others feel like the center of their universe-until the moment they dissolve the illusion.

Their shadow emerges here: they can be cruel in their detachment, treating people as raw material for their own transformation rather than as beings with their own desires. They may leave behind a trail of wounded hearts, not out of malice, but because they cannot bear to be pinned down.

Shadow

The Alchemist’s greatest strength-their refusal to accept stasis-is also their curse. In their relentless pursuit of transformation, they risk becoming unmoored, a series of masks with no core. They may grow weary of their own games, haunted by the fear that beneath all their reinventions, there is nothing at all.

Their detachment can harden into cynicism, their love of decay into a nihilistic embrace of destruction. They must learn that not all things need to be broken to be beautiful-that sometimes, the most profound alchemy is in preservation, not dissolution.