Mare Monom

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2023
Moderate
Sillage
Good
Longevity
Summer
Best Season
Casual
Best For

Fragrance Story

Mare by MONOM is a Aromatic Aquatic fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Mare was launched in 2023. The nose behind this fragrance is Nicola Bianchi.

Composition Profile

woody 100%
amber 85%
musky 70%
powdery 60%
fresh 50%
ozonic 40%

About the Perfumer

Nicola Bianchi

Nicola Bianchi

Nicola Bianchi is an Italian perfumer known for his work with Aquaflor Firenze and the Cristiana Bellodi line. His fragrances, such as Fleuri, Higos, and Vertiver, often highlight fresh, floral, and woody accords. Bianchi’s style is rooted in traditional Italian perfumery, emphasizing elegance and natural ingredients.

Fragrance Notes

All Notes

Complete scent profile

Calone Calone
Ambrox Super Ambrox Super
Cashmeran Cashmeran
Iso E Super Iso E Super
Cetalox Cetalox
Ambrocenide Ambrocenide
Musk Musk
Unique Character

Mare Monom by MONOM 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

Mare Monom embodies the distinctive style of MONOM while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.

Character Profile

The Wanderer Archetype: Portrait of Mare Monom

Essence

The person who cherishes Mare Monom is defined by the Wanderer archetype-a seeker of freedom, authenticity, and uncharted experiences. Like Odysseus navigating the wine-dark sea, they are drawn to the unknown, not out of restlessness, but from a deep conviction that meaning is found in movement. The scent itself-salty, mineralic, with an undercurrent of wild herbs-mirrors their spirit: untamed yet refined, elemental yet sophisticated.

They reject stagnation, whether in thought, place, or identity. Their life is an ongoing pilgrimage, not necessarily in the physical sense (though they may travel often), but in their relentless pursuit of self-discovery. The Wanderer does not fear solitude; in fact, they thrive in it, for it sharpens their perception of the world.

Style & Aesthetic

Their appearance is effortlessly deliberate-a mix of ruggedness and elegance. They favor natural fabrics (linen, wool, worn leather) in muted earth tones, with occasional flashes of deep blue or green, like the sea at dusk. Their wardrobe is minimal but meaningful: each piece has a story, a memory attached.

They prefer scents that evoke landscapes-oceanic, woody, or herbal-never overly sweet or synthetic. Mare Monom suits them because it is both wild and composed, like a storm contained in a bottle.

Their home, if they have one, is a sanctuary of simplicity-books, maps, a few carefully chosen artifacts from their journeys. They might live near the sea or in a city with a restless energy, always close to escape routes.

They thrive on spontaneity: midnight swims, last-minute trips, conversations that stretch into dawn. Routine suffocates them, though they sometimes envy those who find peace in stability.

Philosophy & Values

Their guiding principle is simple yet profound: Truth must be lived, not merely believed. They distrust dogma, whether cultural, religious, or intellectual. Instead, they test ideas against experience, discarding what feels false. This makes them fiercely independent, but also occasionally rootless-unwilling to commit to anything that might chain them.

They value raw honesty over politeness, intensity over comfort, and freedom over security. Their morality is fluid, shaped by intuition rather than rigid rules. They might admire Nietzsche’s amor fati-love of fate-believing that even suffering has meaning if it deepens understanding.

Relationships

They attract people effortlessly but keep few close. Their relationships are intense but transient-some burn brightly and fade, others linger as distant but cherished connections. They are not cruel in their detachment, merely honest: they refuse to feign intimacy where none exists.

Romantically, they are drawn to fellow wanderers-those who understand the need for space, for solitude within love. They struggle with conventional commitments, not out of fear, but because they refuse to love out of obligation. Their love is fierce but free, like the wind over open water.

Shadow

Yet every strength has its inverse. The Wanderer’s refusal to settle can curdle into rootlessness, a fear of deep belonging. They may mistake movement for growth, fleeing discomfort rather than facing it. Their independence can become isolation, their honesty a blade that cuts too deep.

At worst, they become the Drifter-lost not because the path is unclear, but because they refuse to choose one. They may romanticize their solitude, mistaking detachment for wisdom. The sea, after all, is vast but also empty.

Conclusion

The lover of Mare Monom is neither hero nor rebel, but a quiet philosopher of motion. They understand that to stand still is to die in increments. Their flaw is their virtue taken to excess-yet even their wandering is a form of devotion.

They are the one who walks the shoreline at dusk, salt on their skin, the horizon always calling. Not because they are running, but because they are listening-to the wind, to the waves, to the voice that says: Further.