Madeleine Masque Milano

For Women
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2020
Moderate
Sillage
Very Good
Longevity
Fall
Best Season
Evening
Best For

Fragrance Story

Madeleine by Masque Milano is a Oriental Floral fragrance for women. Madeleine was launched in 2020. The nose behind this fragrance is Fanny Bal. Top notes are Chestnut, Whipped Cream and Cumin; middle notes are Tuberose, Geranium and Cypress; base notes are Milk, Vanilla Pod, Musk and Tonka Bean.

Composition Profile

lactonic 100%
vanilla 85%
sweet 70%
nutty 60%
balsamic 50%
fresh spicy 40%
warm spicy 35%
musky 30%
powdery 25%
amber 20%

About the Perfumer

Fanny Bal

Fanny Bal

Fanny Bal is a perfumer who has contributed to multiple brands, including 4711 and Al-Jazeera Perfumes. For 4711, she created Acqua Colonia Intense Pure Breeze Of Himalaya and Peony & Sandalwood. For Al-Jazeera Perfumes, she composed 97 Élysées, Carnaval, Coup Du Monde, Damascus Musk, London, and Marbella, showcasing her ability to craft both fresh and opulent scents.

Fragrance Notes

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Chestnut Chestnut
Whipped Cream Whipped Cream
Cumin Cumin

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Tuberose Tuberose
Geranium Geranium
Cypress Cypress

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Milk Milk
Vanilla Pod Vanilla Pod
Musk Musk
Tonka Bean Tonka Bean
Unique Character

Madeleine Masque Milano by Masque Milano 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

Madeleine Masque Milano embodies the distinctive style of Masque Milano while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.

Character Profile

The Alchemist Archetype: Portrait of Madeleine Masque Milano

Essence

To wear Madeleine Masque Milano is to embrace a fragrance that is at once opulent and enigmatic-a blend of warm spices, powdery florals, and a whisper of leather, evoking the scent of an old library filled with rare books and forgotten secrets. The person who favors this fragrance is drawn to depth, transformation, and the alchemy of experience. They are, at their core, an Alchemist-one who seeks to transmute the mundane into the extraordinary, to find meaning in the interplay of shadow and light.

Their presence is magnetic but never ostentatious. They move through the world with quiet confidence, as if privy to a hidden truth others have yet to grasp. Their tastes are refined but never predictable; they appreciate the patina of age on a well-worn leather chair just as much as the sharp modernity of a minimalist sculpture.

Style & Aesthetic

Their wardrobe is a carefully composed archive of textures and tones-vintage velvet blazers, tailored trousers with a slight eccentricity, perhaps a single piece of antique jewelry that carries a story. They favor deep burgundies, forest greens, and midnight blues, colors that suggest richness without flash.

Their home is a sanctuary of curated objects: first editions of obscure novels, a collection of amber glass bottles, a Persian rug with faded grandeur. Every item is chosen not for trend but for resonance, as if each carries a fragment of a larger narrative.

But here, too, lies a shadow. Their love for the rare and refined can tip into elitism, an unspoken belief that their tastes are superior. They may disdain the mainstream not out of genuine preference, but out of a need to distinguish themselves.

They do not merely work; they craft their days like an alchemist’s experiment. Whether they are a writer, a perfumer, a historian, or a designer, their vocation is less about external success and more about the act of creation itself. They thrive in environments that allow for contemplation-a quiet studio, a dimly lit café, a forest path at dusk.

Yet their shadow here is a resistance to mundanity. They may struggle with routine, dismissing it as a prison rather than a foundation. They forget that even the alchemist must grind the mortar before the gold can emerge.

Philosophy & Values

For them, life is not merely lived but deciphered. They are drawn to philosophy, mysticism, and the arts-not as idle pastimes, but as tools for understanding the deeper currents of existence. They believe in the power of symbols, in the way a scent, a color, or a turn of phrase can unlock forgotten chambers of the soul.

Their values are rooted in authenticity, but not the simplistic kind-they understand that authenticity often wears many masks, and that truth is rarely found in absolutes. They are drawn to paradox, to the idea that wisdom lies in holding contradictions without needing to resolve them.

Yet this very strength can become their shadow. Their relentless quest for depth can make them impatient with the surface of things, dismissing simplicity as naivety. They may grow frustrated with those who do not share their hunger for the esoteric, retreating into intellectual solitude.

Relationships

In love and friendship, they are both deeply present and strangely distant. They crave connection, but only of a certain kind-one that allows for mystery, for the unspoken to linger. They are drawn to those who intrigue them, who offer puzzles to solve rather than easy answers.

Their relationships are intense but not always steady. They may withdraw without warning, not out of malice, but because they need solitude to process the weight of their own emotions. Those who love them must accept that they will never fully be known-that some part of them will always remain in shadow.

Their flaw here is a tendency to romanticize complexity, mistaking emotional turbulence for depth. They may sabotage stable relationships in search of something more "profound," only to realize too late that profundity was always within reach.

Conclusion

To love Madeleine Masque Milano is to love the interplay of light and shadow, the way a fragrance can be both comforting and unsettling. The Alchemist archetype defines them because they are forever in pursuit of transformation-not just of the world, but of themselves.

Their greatest strength is their ability to see beyond the obvious, to find magic in the overlooked. Their greatest flaw is the belief that only the hidden is valuable-that what is plain must be beneath them.

Yet in their best moments, they remember: true alchemy is not just in turning lead to gold, but in recognizing that the lead itself was never ordinary.