Rose Struck Liis
Fragrance Story
Rose Struck by Liis is a Floral fragrance for women and men. Rose Struck was launched in 2020. Rose Struck was created by Alissa Sullivan and Leslie Hendin. Top notes are Tangerine and Black Currant; middle note is Matcha Tea; base notes are May Rose and Damask Rose.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Alissa Sullivan
Alissa Sullivan is a perfumer and founder of the fragrance brand Liis, where she creates all of the scents. Her olfactory style emphasizes transparency and minimalism, often using clean, airy compositions with subtle complexity. Notable creations from her brand include Bo Liis, Floating Liis, and Rose Struck Liis, each reflecting her focus on wearable, intimate scents.
Fragrance Notes
Rose Struck Liis by Liis 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.
Rose Struck Liis embodies the distinctive style of Liis while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Rose Struck Liis
Essence
To wear Rose Struck by Liis is to embrace a fragrance that is at once delicate and assertive-a paradox of softness and depth. The scent is luminous, yet grounded, with the velvety richness of rose tempered by earthy, woody undertones. It does not shout but lingers, a whisper that demands attention. The person who chooses this fragrance is, above all, a Lover-not in the trivial sense of romance alone, but in the Jungian sense of one who seeks beauty, connection, and meaning through the senses.
The Lover archetype is ruled by passion-not just for people, but for life itself. This is someone who experiences the world intensely, finding ecstasy in art, music, touch, and scent. They are drawn to what is beautiful, not as a superficial indulgence, but as a necessity. A life without aesthetic pleasure is, to them, a half-lived life.
Their tastes are refined but never sterile. They appreciate the elegance of a well-set table, the texture of aged paper in a book, the way light filters through stained glass. Yet they are not mere aesthetes; they seek meaning in beauty. A rose is not just a flower-it is a symbol of fleeting perfection, of love and decay intertwined.
In style, they favor garments that feel as good as they look-soft silks, cashmere, fabrics that move with the body. Their wardrobe is curated, not cluttered, each piece chosen for its emotional resonance. They might wear a vintage brooch that belonged to a grandmother, not out of nostalgia alone, but because it carries a story.
Style & Aesthetic
In relationships, they are magnetic but not always easy. They crave depth, and small talk exhausts them. They attract admirers effortlessly, but few truly understand them. Their love is a flame-warm and bright, but capable of burning those who grasp too tightly. They are not cruel, but they are honest, sometimes to a fault.
Their lifestyle is one of cultivated pleasure. They might live in a sunlit apartment filled with books and fresh flowers, or a rustic cottage where the scent of herbs lingers in the air. They cook not just to eat but to savor-every meal is an occasion. They travel not to check off destinations but to feel places-the spice markets of Marrakech, the damp earth of an English garden after rain.
Philosophy & Values
The Lover’s philosophy is one of connection. They believe in the power of intimacy-not only between lovers but between friends, between artist and audience, between the self and the world. They are drawn to philosophies that celebrate the sensual and the emotional: aspects of Romanticism, Sufi poetry, even certain strands of hedonism-though never the reckless kind. Their hedonism is deliberate, a way of honoring life’s richness.
Their values center on authenticity. They despise artifice, though they appreciate theater-there is a difference. A staged performance can be truthful if it comes from the heart; a hollow compliment is an offense. They value loyalty but are not possessive. Love, to them, is not about ownership but about mutual elevation.
Shadow
Yet every archetype has its shadow, and the Lover is no exception. Their intensity can tip into excess-too much wine, too many late nights, a heart too easily bruised. They may struggle with melancholy, for beauty is often bittersweet, and they feel its passing acutely.
Their pursuit of passion can also lead to indecision. When every choice is weighed for its emotional weight, they may linger too long at crossroads, afraid of closing any door. And their disdain for the mundane can make them impatient with life’s necessary drudgeries-bills, chores, the unglamorous labor that sustains even the most poetic existence.
At worst, they may become lost in fantasy, mistaking infatuation for love, aesthetics for substance. A rose is beautiful, but it still has thorns-and the Lover, in their rapture, may forget to look for them until it is too late.
Conclusion
Yet it is precisely this tension-between ecstasy and melancholy, between the ideal and the real-that makes the Lover who they are. They are not naive; they know that roses wilt. But they believe the wilting is part of the beauty.
To love deeply is to risk pain, and the wearer of Rose Struck accepts this bargain. They would rather feel too much than too little. Their life is not a perfect bloom, but a garden-sometimes wild, sometimes tended, always alive.