Botanical Essence No. 100 Liz Earle
Fragrance Story
Botanical Essence No. 100 by Liz Earle is a Floral fragrance for women. Botanical Essence No. 100 was launched in 2013. The nose behind this fragrance is Alienor Massenet. Top notes are Mandarin Orange, Bergamot, Clove Leaf and Freesia; middle notes are French orange flower, Indian Jasmine, Damask Rose, Ylang-Ylang and Rose Geranium; base notes are Gardenia, Cypress, Vetiver, Sandalwood and Bourbon Vanilla.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Alienor Massenet
Alienor Massenet is a French perfumer known for her work with major fragrance houses, including Givaudan. Her style balances modern elegance with subtle complexity, often highlighting floral and woody contrasts. Notable creations include the luminous Rose Lumiere for Armand Basi and the enigmatic Black Swan for Brocard.
Fragrance Notes
Character Profile
The Sage Archetype: Portrait of Botanical Essence No. 100 Liz Earle
Essence
This person is most closely aligned with the Sage-an archetype rooted in wisdom, discernment, and a deep connection to nature’s rhythms. The Sage seeks truth not through dogma but through sensory and intellectual exploration, valuing clarity, simplicity, and authenticity. Botanical Essence No. 100, with its grounding blend of neroli, eucalyptus, and rosemary, reflects this archetype’s essence: a fragrance that is both purifying and contemplative, evoking the quiet confidence of someone who knows themselves well.
Style & Aesthetic
Their aesthetic is quietly refined, favoring natural fabrics, muted tones, and timeless cuts. Linen, wool, and unbleached cotton dominate their wardrobe-garments that age gracefully, much like their own evolving self-awareness. They might wear a single piece of handcrafted jewelry, something imbued with personal meaning, rather than adornments meant to dazzle.
Their home is a sanctuary of order and warmth: wooden shelves lined with books, a vase of dried lavender on the windowsill, a well-worn leather chair where they retreat with a journal. They are not minimalist for minimalism’s sake, but because they understand that space-physical and mental-must be earned, not cluttered.
Mornings are sacred-a slow ritual of black coffee, stretching, perhaps a few pages of Rilke or Mary Oliver. They move through the world with a naturalist’s eye, noticing the shift of seasons, the way light falls differently in October than in June. Exercise is less about vanity and more about harmony; they prefer long walks, yoga, or swimming in open water.
Work is meaningful but never all-consuming. They might be a writer, a therapist, a landscape architect-any vocation that allows for contemplation and creation. They are disciplined but not rigid, understanding that true productivity requires space for wandering thoughts.
Philosophy & Values
Their worldview is shaped by a reverence for balance-between intellect and intuition, discipline and spontaneity. They distrust excess, whether in materialism or emotional indulgence, preferring the elegance of restraint. Their philosophy might be distilled to: "To live well is to live deliberately." They are drawn to Stoicism, herbalism, and perhaps even Zen Buddhism, finding solace in practices that cultivate presence.
Yet, their wisdom is not cold or detached. They believe in the sacredness of small things-the scent of rain on dry earth, the weight of a well-bound book, the ritual of brewing tea. Their values are ecological, often advocating for sustainability not as a trend but as a moral imperative.
Relationships
They are selectively intimate, valuing depth over breadth in relationships. Friendships are cultivated slowly, like rare herbs in a garden, and they have little patience for superficial exchanges. Their love language is acts of service-preparing a meal with homegrown herbs, remembering a friend’s favorite passage from a novel, offering advice only when asked.
Romantically, they seek a partner who respects solitude as much as togetherness. They are not prone to grand romantic gestures but express devotion through steadfastness-a hand on the shoulder at the right moment, a shared silence that needs no words.
Yet, their discerning nature can slip into aloofness. They may unintentionally distance themselves, mistaking emotional reserve for wisdom. Their shadow fears vulnerability, sometimes rationalizing detachment as self-sufficiency.
Shadow
The Sage’s greatest strength-their self-containment-can also be their undoing. When unbalanced, they retreat too far inward, mistaking solitude for enlightenment and connection for distraction. They may grow overly critical, dismissing others’ perspectives as naive, or become paralyzed by their own high standards.
Their challenge is to remember that wisdom is not a fortress but a bridge-that the scent of rosemary is just as vital when shared.
Conclusion
To wear Botanical Essence No. 100 is to embody a quiet kind of mastery-not over others, but over the self. This person does not seek to dominate or dazzle; they seek to understand, to distill life into its purest form. Their flaws are the price of their virtues, their solitude the cost of their depth.
And yet, when they choose to step into the light, their presence is like the fragrance itself: subtle, lingering, impossible to forget.