Love Exposure Moth And Rabbit Perfumes
Fragrance Story
Love Exposure by Moth and Rabbit Perfumes is a Floral Woody Musk fragrance for women and men. The nose behind this fragrance is Mark Buxton. Top notes are Magnolia Petals, Neroli Essence, Ylang-Ylang and Cassis; middle notes are Jasmine Sambac, Bay essence, Costus and Cumin; base notes are Sandalwood, Musk, Ambergris, Incense and Vanilla.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Mark Buxton
Mark Buxton is a renowned perfumer whose creations include Dead Air for .Oddity, Elixir De Bombe for 27 87, and Orchid Vanilla for 4711. His diverse portfolio spans avant-garde, woody, and floral scents for both niche and classic brands. He is celebrated for his innovative and unconventional style.
Fragrance Notes
Love Exposure Moth And Rabbit Perfumes by Moth and Rabbit Perfumes 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.
Love Exposure Moth And Rabbit Perfumes embodies the distinctive style of Moth and Rabbit Perfumes while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Love Exposure Moth And Rabbit Perfumes
Essence
This person is most closely aligned with The Seeker, an archetype defined by an insatiable curiosity, a hunger for the hidden, and a relentless pursuit of meaning beyond the obvious. The fragrance they adore-Love Exposure Moth and Rabbit-hints at their fascination with duality: the delicate and the wild, the ephemeral and the enduring, the seen and the unseen. Like the moth drawn to light, they are pulled toward experiences that shimmer just beyond comprehension, yet like the rabbit, they remain grounded in instinct, quick-footed and alert to the world’s subtleties.
Shadow
Yet this very hunger for the unseen can become their undoing. Their pursuit of depth can tip into escapism, a refusal to commit to anything long enough to let it truly shape them. They may grow impatient with the mundane, dismissing ordinary joys as beneath them, when in truth, their disdain is often a mask for fear-fear of being known too well, of being pinned down.
Their relationships suffer when their idealism clashes with reality. They may romanticize people, then discard them when they prove human, flawed. They mistake transience for transcendence, forgetting that even the most fleeting moments are anchored in the weight of the real. At their worst, they become spectral, drifting through life without leaving a mark, always searching but never arriving.
Conclusion
Their tastes are eclectic, drawn to the liminal spaces where beauty and strangeness intersect. They might favor vintage lace paired with sharp, modern lines, or books that blur the line between poetry and philosophy. Their home is a sanctuary of curated oddities-dried flowers, half-burned candles, sketches of creatures that don’t exist. They are not afraid of decay; they find elegance in the way things fade, in the quiet drama of impermanence.
Philosophically, they reject rigid dogma, instead embracing a fluid sense of truth. They believe meaning is not found but made, and they are willing to wander through uncertainty to grasp it. Their values are rooted in authenticity-not the performative kind, but the raw, unpolished honesty of a moment unfiltered. They despise pretense, yet they themselves are not immune to the occasional affectation, a carefully constructed carelessness.