Sacred Amber My Perfumes Select
Fragrance Story
Sacred Amber by My Perfumes Select is a Oriental Woody fragrance for women and men. Sacred Amber was launched in 2021. The nose behind this fragrance is Nathalie Templer. Top notes are Cardamom and Cedarwood; middle notes are Amber and Ylang Ylang; base notes are Ambergris, Dry Wood and Heliotrope.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Nathalie Templer
Nathalie Templer is a perfumer known for her contributions to brands like Arabiyat, Chabaud Maison de Parfum, and Parfums de Marly. She created several fragrances for Arabiyat, including Ashâa Amethyst and Nyla, as well as the gourmand Mon Tiramisù for Chabaud. Her work also includes Greenley for Parfums de Marly and compositions for Eutopie and My Perfumes Select.
Fragrance Notes
Sacred Amber My Perfumes Select by My Perfumes Select 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.
Sacred Amber My Perfumes Select embodies the distinctive style of My Perfumes Select while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Sage Archetype: Portrait of Sacred Amber My Perfumes Select
Essence
The one who chooses Sacred Amber is drawn to the warmth of antiquity, the weight of wisdom, and the quiet glow of something eternal. They are, at their core, a Sage-a seeker of truth, a keeper of knowledge, and a guardian of the sacred. The fragrance itself, with its deep resinous tones, smoky whispers, and golden richness, mirrors their inner world: complex, contemplative, and anchored in something beyond the fleeting.
The Sage does not chase trends; they seek the timeless. They are the philosopher in the corner of the library, the mystic who finds divinity in silence, the mentor whose words carry the weight of lived experience. Yet, like all archetypes, the Sage has a shadow-one that can slip into dogmatism, detachment, or an overbearing certainty in their own wisdom.
Style & Aesthetic
Their tastes are deliberate, never accidental. They prefer the patina of aged leather over the gloss of new plastic, the weight of a well-bound book over the flicker of a screen. Their home is a sanctuary, filled with artifacts that tell stories-antique maps, incense burners, perhaps a collection of rare stones or dried botanicals. They do not decorate; they curate.
Philosophy is not an abstract exercise for them-it is the lens through which they live. They may be drawn to Stoicism for its discipline, to Zen for its clarity, or to Hermeticism for its layered symbolism. Truth is not something they merely believe in; it is something they hunt, like a scent on the wind. Their values are rooted in wisdom, authenticity, and depth-superficiality is not just distasteful to them, it is an offense against the sacred.
Their days are structured, not out of rigidity, but out of reverence. Morning tea is a ceremony, not a habit. They may keep a journal, not to record trivialities, but to trace the evolution of their thoughts. Work, for them, must have meaning-they are the scholars, the therapists, the archivists, the ones who preserve what others forget.
But the shadow of this discipline is a refusal to bend. They may dismiss spontaneity as frivolity, mistake flexibility for weakness. When life demands adaptation, they can become stubborn, clinging to their rituals like armor.
Relationships
They are not the life of the party, but they are the one people seek out when they need insight. Their friendships are few but profound, built on mutual respect rather than idle chatter. They are natural mentors, though they do not force their wisdom upon others-it is offered only when asked for, like a rare spice passed across a table.
Yet, their shadow emerges in relationships when their love of solitude hardens into isolation. They may withdraw too deeply into their own mind, becoming distant, even cold. Their certainty in their own perspective can sometimes blind them to the emotional needs of others, leaving loved ones feeling like students rather than equals.
Conclusion
In their light, they are guides, luminaries who help others navigate the dark. Their presence is steadying, their insights illuminating. But in their shadow, they risk becoming the rigid scholar who mistakes their own scrolls for the whole of truth. The challenge for the Sacred Amber soul is to remain open-to let wisdom be a flame, not a cage.
They are not perfect, nor do they seek to be. They seek only to understand-and in that understanding, to touch something eternal.