Terre Fertile No.18 Marie-stella-maris
Fragrance Story
Terre Fertile No.18 by Marie-Stella-Maris is a Woody Spicy fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Terre Fertile No.18 was launched in 2024. Terre Fertile No.18 was created by Douglas Morel and Charlotte Jullien. Top notes are Grapefruit, Bergamot, Mandarin and Pink Pepper; middle notes are Iris, Rose and Black Pepper; base notes are Tonka Bean, Sandal, Leather, Cashmere Wood, Vanilla, Dry Wood, Ambroxan, Cedar, Vetiver, Nutmeg and Smoke.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Charlotte Jullien
Charlotte Jullien is a perfumer known for her work with Marie-Stella-Maris, Nasamat Najd, and Van De Zotte. She created Amber Haze No.15, Flower Water No.20, Rose Fumée No.17, Terre Fertile No.18, Ginger Nasamat Najd, and Wild Van De Zotte. Her compositions range from serene florals to spicy, earthy blends.
Fragrance Notes
Terre Fertile No.18 Marie-stella-maris by Marie-Stella-Maris 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.
Terre Fertile No.18 Marie-stella-maris embodies the distinctive style of Marie-Stella-Maris while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Terre Fertile No Archetype: Portrait of Terre Fertile No.18 Marie-stella-maris
Essence
This person is most closely aligned with the Caregiver archetype, though not in the conventional sense. Their nurturing instinct is not born from self-sacrifice alone but from a deep reverence for life’s organic cycles-growth, decay, renewal. Terre Fertile No. 18, with its grounding vetiver, crisp bergamot, and earthy moss, speaks to someone who finds beauty in the raw, unfiltered essence of existence. They are the kind of soul who tends to both gardens and people, believing that care is not just an act but a philosophy.
Yet, this archetype is not passive. Beneath their composed exterior lies a quiet wildness-an understanding that to nurture is also to allow for chaos, for the untamed parts of life to flourish. They are not the saintly martyr but the gardener who knows when to prune and when to let the weeds grow.
Philosophy & Values
They live by the principle that meaning is found not in grand gestures but in the quiet rituals of daily life-the brewing of tea, the tending of plants, the slow preparation of a meal. They reject the modern obsession with speed and excess, favoring instead a rhythm that aligns with nature’s own.
Their values are rooted in stewardship-of the earth, of relationships, of their own inner world. They believe in reciprocity: that to take from the world requires giving back in equal measure. This makes them deeply ethical, sometimes to the point of rigidity. They despise waste, both material and emotional, and have little patience for superficiality.
Yet, their reverence for depth can become a kind of dogma. They may dismiss those who don’t share their intensity as frivolous, failing to see that lightness, too, has its place in the balance of things.
Relationships
In love and friendship, they are selective but fiercely loyal. They do not give their trust lightly, but once earned, it is unwavering. Their relationships are built on presence-long conversations over shared meals, walks in silence, the kind of companionship that requires no performance.
Yet, their shadow emerges in their expectations. They can be quietly judgmental, holding others to standards they themselves struggle to meet. Their need for authenticity sometimes borders on intolerance for human frailty-forgetting that even the most fertile soil must sometimes lie fallow.
Shadow
The greatest danger for this person is the belief that they alone know the right way to nurture. Their strength-their deep attunement to life’s rhythms-can curdle into a subtle arrogance, a conviction that their path is the only true one. They may resent those who seem to float through life without their same gravity, not realizing that their own seriousness can be a kind of prison.
At their worst, they become the overbearing gardener-pruning too much, stifling the wildness they once cherished. They must remember that even the most carefully tended earth sometimes needs to be left alone.
Conclusion
This is a person who understands that growth is not always neat, that life’s richest moments often come from the mess, the decay, the unexpected. Terre Fertile No. 18 is their scent because it mirrors their essence-earthy, complex, alive with both order and wildness.
They are not the saint, nor the sage, but the quiet cultivator of meaning. And if they can embrace both their light and their shadow, they will find that the most fertile ground is the one that knows when to hold firm and when to let go.