Morriselle Pour Elle Le Parfum Morris

For Women
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2016
Moderate
Sillage
Very Good
Longevity
Fall
Best Season
Evening
Best For

Fragrance Story

Morriselle Pour Elle Le Parfum by Morris is a Oriental Floral fragrance for women. Morriselle Pour Elle Le Parfum was launched in 2016. The nose behind this fragrance is Paolo Cerizza. Top notes are Lemon, Apple Blossom, Cardamom and Mandarin Orange; middle notes are Jasmine, Orange Blossom, Hawthorn, Pansy and Violet; base notes are Heliotrope, White Amber and Cashmere Wood.

Composition Profile

white floral 100%
floral 85%
citrus 70%
powdery 60%
sweet 50%
amber 40%
animalic 35%

About the Perfumer

Paolo Cerizza

Paolo Cerizza

Paolo Cerizza is a perfumer with a diverse portfolio, including creations for AcquaDì, Duomo Milano, and Esse Strikes The Notes. His fragrances range from the fresh and intense Acquadi Intense to the complex Anima Vertiginosa and Opera Maestra for Duomo Milano. Cerizza also contributed to the Esse Strikes The Notes line with Lavinia, Rock 'n' Salt, and Serena, showcasing his versatility across different styles.

Fragrance Notes

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Lemon Lemon
Apple Blossom Apple Blossom
Cardamom Cardamom
Mandarin Orange Mandarin Orange

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Jasmine Jasmine
Orange Blossom Orange Blossom
Hawthorn Hawthorn
Pansy Pansy
Violet Violet

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Heliotrope Heliotrope
White Amber White Amber
Cashmere Wood Cashmere Wood

Character Profile

The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Morriselle Pour Elle Le Parfum Morris

Essence

To wear Morriselle Pour Elle Le Parfum is to embrace a fragrance that is both opulent and intimate-a blend of warmth, floral elegance, and a lingering depth that suggests more than it reveals. The person who chooses this scent is not merely drawn to its aroma; they are defined by it, embodying the Lover archetype in its most refined and complex form.

This is a person for whom beauty is not a luxury but a necessity. They move through the world with an innate sensuality, not in the crude sense of mere physical allure, but in the way they perceive and engage with life itself. Every experience-whether a sip of wine, the touch of silk, or the golden light of dusk-is felt with heightened intensity. Their philosophy is simple yet profound: to live is to feel deeply.

Their tastes are refined but never ostentatious. They prefer understated luxury-cashmere over sequins, handwritten letters over digital messages, a single perfect rose over an extravagant bouquet. Their home is a sanctuary of textures and scents: aged leather books, freshly ground coffee, the faintest trace of incense. They are drawn to art that speaks of passion-Caravaggio’s chiaroscuro, Rumi’s poetry, the melancholic chords of a nocturne.

Relationships

For them, love is not a transaction but an act of devotion. They seek connections that are both emotionally and aesthetically fulfilling-partners who appreciate the slow unfolding of intimacy, who understand that silence can be as expressive as words. Their relationships are marked by a quiet intensity; they do not love lightly, nor do they forgive easily.

Yet, their devotion carries a shadow. The Lover’s greatest fear is indifference, and so they may cling too tightly, mistaking possession for passion. They can be possessive, not out of malice, but from an almost childlike terror of being forgotten. When wounded, they retreat into themselves, wrapping their vulnerability in layers of elegance until even they forget where the pain lies.

Shadow

The Lover’s depth is both their strength and their peril. Their capacity for pleasure is matched only by their susceptibility to excess-whether in love, in indulgence, or in sorrow. They may lose themselves in nostalgia, romanticizing the past until the present feels hollow. At their worst, they become hedonists of emotion, chasing intensity for its own sake, mistaking drama for meaning.

Their challenge is to temper their passions with wisdom-to love without losing themselves, to feel deeply without drowning in sensation. When balanced, they are life’s true aesthetes, finding beauty not only in grand gestures but in the quiet moments between.

Conclusion

To know this person is to witness a life lived with deliberate richness. They are the ones who remember birthdays with handwritten notes, who linger over meals as if each bite were a poem, who find the sacred in the ordinary. Their presence is magnetic not because they demand attention, but because they offer a rare quality: the ability to make others feel truly seen.

Yet they are not without their contradictions. They may appear serene, but beneath the surface, storms brew-longing, doubt, the occasional ache of unmet desire. But these very tensions make them human, compelling, and ultimately unforgettable.

In the end, the wearer of Morriselle Pour Elle Le Parfum is not merely a lover of beauty, but a living testament to its power. They remind us that to feel deeply is not a weakness, but the highest form of courage.