Roll-on Perfume No. 2 Melange Perfume

Unisex
Perfume Oil
Year: 2015

At a glance

Is Roll-on Perfume No. 2 Melange Perfume worth trying?

Roll-On Perfume No.

Best match
Casual wear in Spring, Summer
Performance feel
Moderate longevity with Intimate sillage
Signature profile
yellow floral, powdery, citrus with Mimosa, Bergamot, Amalfi Lemon

The first impression

Roll-On Perfume No. 2 by Melange Perfume is a Citrus Aromatic fragrance for women and men. The nose behind this fragrance is Denise Estrada.

What shapes the scent

yellow floral 100%
powdery 85%
citrus 70%
floral 60%
sweet 50%

The perfumer behind it

Denise Estrada

Denise Estrada

Denise Estrada is a perfumer known for her work with the Melange Perfume brand, where she explores a range of scent families. Her creative signature blends rich amber and floral notes with unexpected accents like plum and vanilla orchid. She has crafted diverse compositions for the brand, including the Amber Notes Palette series and the Cedar, Musk & Patchouli Melange Perfume.

Notes pyramid

All Notes

Complete scent profile

Mimosa Mimosa
Bergamot Bergamot
Amalfi Lemon Amalfi Lemon

The mood it creates

The Innocent Archetype: Portrait of Roll-on Perfume No. 2 Melange Perfume

Essence

Roll-On Perfume No. 2 embodies the Innocent archetype, a burst of sunlight captured in a vial. The mimosa and bergamot opening radiates uncomplicated joy, like laughter floating through an open window. This is a scent for those who find profundity in simplicity, who trust that happiness needs no elaborate justification.

The citrusy sweetness speaks to the Jungian notion of purity before the fall-not naivety, but a conscious choice to greet the world with open palms. Like the Amalfi lemon note, they believe in the sacrament of small delights.

Style & Aesthetic

They wear cotton sundresses and well-worn espadrilles, their hair perpetually windswept. Their aesthetic is the opposite of pretension: a straw hat, a daisy chain bracelet, a canvas tote with peeling paint. Their home is all white curtains and terra cotta pots of basil.

The yellow floralcy of the scent mirrors their love of sunflowers on kitchen tables and faded gingham napkins. They’re drawn to objects that feel alive-a slightly lopsided ceramic mug, a quilt made by a great-aunt.

Philosophy & Values

They operate on a economy of kindness-the bergamot’s brightness reflects their belief that generosity costs nothing. They find holiness in laundry drying in the breeze, in sharing the last biscuit, in stopping to watch bees in clover.

Their values are rooted in presence. The powdery drydown suggests their ability to be utterly where they are, whether shelling peas or watching clouds. They trust that most problems can be solved by a nap or a walk.

Relationships

They attract weary souls in need of respite-their friendships are oases of nonjudgment. Romantic partners describe them as "like coming home." They’re the person who remembers your favorite childhood candy and surprises you with it on a bad day.

The mimosa’s softness reflects their gift for gentle listening. They have a way of making people feel uncomplicatedly loved, like the fragrance’s sweet floral embrace.

Lifestyle

Mornings involve barefoot gardening and singing off-key to old records. They’re likely to pack a picnic on a whim or spend an afternoon making lemon curd. Even their work-perhaps teaching children or arranging flowers-feels like play.

The citrus notes mirror their habit of leaving handwritten notes in library books or pressing wildflowers into letters. They move through the world lightly, like the perfume’s intimate sillage.

Shadow

Their shadow hides in avoidance-the sweetness can tip into saccharine if overapplied. They sometimes use optimism as armor, refusing to acknowledge life’s sharper edges. The bergamot’s slight bitterness hints at suppressed sorrows.

They must learn that innocence isn’t ignorance. The powdery drydown reminds them that even sunshine casts shadows.

Conclusion

Roll-On Perfume No. 2 is the Innocent archetype in liquid form-a fragrance that celebrates the ordinary miracle of being alive. Like the mimosa that dances through its composition, this archetype reminds us that joy is a practice, not a circumstance.