Rose Vinyle Myropol
Fragrance Story
Rose Vinyle by Myropol is a Floral fragrance for women and men. Rose Vinyle was launched in 2015. The nose behind this fragrance is Andrey Oleynikov.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Andrey Oleynikov
Andrey Oleynikov is a Russian perfumer known for his work with niche houses like Ladanika and Myropol. His style blends naturalistic floral and woody accords with subtle resinous or fougère undertones, often evoking poetic landscapes. Notable creations include the powdery floral Flower Waltz for Ladanika and the contemplative Dug-pa for Myropol, showcasing his ability to balance transparency with depth.
Fragrance Notes
Character Profile
The Romantic Archetype: Portrait of Rose Vinyle Myropol
Essence
The one who chooses Rose Vinyle Myropol as their fragrance is not merely drawn to its scent-they are seduced by its paradox. A modern rose, neither cloying nor nostalgic, but electric, almost synthetic in its allure, yet undeniably alive. This person embodies the Romantic archetype, a seeker of beauty, intensity, and meaning in a world that often resists such depth. They are not content with the mundane; they crave the sublime, the moment where emotion transcends reason.
Their life is a tapestry woven with aesthetic devotion-every choice, from the books they read to the clothes they wear, is an act of self-expression bordering on ritual. They do not merely dress; they compose an image. Velvet blazers, silk scarves, vintage jewelry-each piece is selected not for trend but for texture, for the way it catches light or whispers against skin. They are drawn to the interplay of old and new, much like Rose Vinyle Myropol itself-a fragrance that is both futuristic and timeless.
Style & Aesthetic
Their home is a sanctuary, a carefully arranged stage where every object tells a story. Antique perfume bottles on a mirrored tray, a record player spinning vinyl, a single rose in a slender vase-nothing is accidental. They thrive in cities where history and modernity collide: Paris, Berlin, Tokyo. They are nocturnal creatures, most alive in the hours when the world softens into twilight.
Yet this curation can become escapism. When reality proves too harsh, they retreat into their aesthetic fortress, mistaking beauty for meaning. They may indulge in nostalgia, romanticizing past eras they never lived, or lose themselves in fantasies of a life more poetic than the one they lead.
Philosophy & Values
For them, life is not about utility but about resonance. They believe in love as a force, in art as necessity, in passion as the truest form of truth. Their philosophy is one of aesthetic existentialism-they do not ask why they exist but how they might make existence more vivid. They are drawn to poets like Rilke, musicians like Bowie, filmmakers like Wong Kar-wai-artists who blur the line between beauty and melancholy.
Yet this pursuit is not without peril. Their values, though noble, can tip into idealism, leaving them disillusioned when reality fails to match their vision. They may scorn the practical, dismissing those who prioritize stability over sensation. This is their first shadow: a tendency to see the world in extremes-either ecstatic or empty, never merely enough.
Relationships
In love, they are both devotee and deity. They do not simply fall for others-they immerse themselves, crafting relationships like a sculptor shapes marble. Every glance, every touch, is laden with meaning. They are drawn to those who mirror their intensity, who understand that love is not a transaction but a transformation.
But here, the shadow emerges again. Their hunger for depth can become possessive, their idealism a cage. They may resent partners who cannot sustain their emotional frequency, interpreting ordinary human limitations as betrayals. They fear abandonment not because they are weak, but because they have staked so much of themselves on the idea of a perfect union.
Shadow
The Romantic’s greatest strength-their capacity for feeling-is also their vulnerability. When their passions go unrequited or their ideals unmet, they risk slipping into melancholy, a state where beauty becomes bittersweet, then burdensome. They may grow cynical, dismissing those who do not share their fervor as shallow. Or worse, they may cling to lost loves, turning memory into a shrine rather than a lesson.
But in their best moments, they are alchemists-transforming pain into art, solitude into self-discovery. They understand that to love deeply is to risk deeply, and they would rather burn briefly and bright than smolder in safety.
Conclusion
The lover of Rose Vinyle Myropol is not merely a connoisseur of fragrance but a pilgrim of feeling. They walk the line between dream and reality, always searching for the moment when the two collide. Their flaw is their grandeur; their grandeur, their flaw. Yet in a world that often favors the pragmatic over the poetic, they remind us that to live is not just to endure-but to feel, fiercely and without apology.