Bodrum N°3 Mango
Fragrance Story
Bodrum N°3 by Mango is a Aromatic Spicy fragrance for men. Bodrum N°3 was launched in 2021. The nose behind this fragrance is Jérôme di Marino. Top notes are Bergamot and Fir; middle notes are Lavender, Saffron and Cedar; base notes are Guaiacol and Balsam Fir.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Jérôme di Marino
Jérôme di Marino is a French perfumer with a diverse portfolio spanning luxury and niche brands. He has created Balade Aux Tuileries for Agatha Paris, Valensole Lavender for Alfred Dunhill, and Lunar Vetiver for Amouroud. His work also includes Mon Petit Chou for Blumarine and several fragrances for Burberry, such as Burberry Her Elixir De Parfum and Windsor Tonic. Di Marino is recognized for his ability to blend classic and contemporary elements.
Fragrance Notes
Bodrum N°3 Mango by Mango 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.
Bodrum N°3 Mango embodies the distinctive style of Mango while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Bodrum N°3 Mango
Essence
To wear Bodrum N°3 Mango is to embrace a scent that is vibrant, indulgent, and unapologetically sensual-a fragrance that speaks of sun-drenched skin, laughter echoing over turquoise waters, and the slow, deliberate pleasure of existence. The person who chooses this scent is ruled by the Lover archetype, one who seeks beauty, connection, and intensity in all things. They are drawn to the richness of life, not as a passive observer but as an active participant, savoring textures, flavors, and emotions with an almost hedonistic devotion.
Yet, the Lover is not merely a creature of pleasure; they are also a seeker of meaning through experience. Their philosophy is simple but profound: life is to be tasted, not merely endured. They reject austerity, seeing it as a denial of the senses, and instead cultivate a world where every moment holds the potential for delight.
Philosophy & Values
They believe in carpe diem, but not in the reckless sense-rather, as a deliberate act of reverence for life’s fleeting beauty. They value authenticity, detesting pretense, and have little patience for those who armor themselves in cynicism. To them, joy is not frivolous; it is an act of resistance against the gray monotony of the modern world.
Yet, their aversion to suffering can make them avoid deeper commitments. They may flit from passion to passion, lover to lover, experience to experience, always chasing the next intoxication. Their challenge is to learn that true depth comes not just from pleasure, but from enduring through the bitter as well as the sweet.
Shadow
The Lover’s greatest strength is their ability to feel deeply-to love with abandon, to savor beauty, to inspire others to drop their inhibitions and embrace the present. They are magnetic, not because they demand attention, but because they offer an invitation: come, taste this moment with me. Their relationships are intense, marked by loyalty and a fierce appreciation for those they hold dear.
But the shadow of the Lover is indulgence without restraint. They may struggle with excess-whether in love, pleasure, or material comforts. Their pursuit of the exquisite can tip into decadence, leaving them adrift in a cycle of fleeting satisfactions. They may avoid discomfort, even when it is necessary, preferring the soft glow of a candlelit evening to the harsh light of self-examination. At their worst, they can become fickle, chasing the next thrill before the last one has fully faded.
Conclusion
Their tastes are an extension of their archetype-bold, colorful, and unafraid of excess. They favor fabrics that feel luxurious against the skin: silk, linen, cashmere. Their wardrobe is a curated collection of pieces that evoke warmth and vitality, often in shades of saffron, coral, or deep emerald. They are drawn to art that pulses with life-Frida Kahlo’s raw passion, Matisse’s exuberant colors, or the rhythmic poetry of Pablo Neruda.
In their home, every object is chosen for its ability to evoke pleasure: a bowl of ripe figs on the counter, a hand-thrown ceramic vase, a record player spinning vinyl that carries the weight of nostalgia. They entertain often, not out of obligation, but because sharing food, wine, and conversation is their sacred ritual. Their cooking is instinctive, guided by scent and memory rather than rigid recipes-a dash of saffron here, a squeeze of lime there, always trusting the senses over rules.