Reve Royal Nana.m
Fragrance Story
Reve Royal by NANA.M is a Leather fragrance for women. Reve Royal was launched in 2015. The nose behind this fragrance is Céline Ripert. Top notes are Balsam Fir, Osmanthus, Artemisia and Iris; middle notes are Honey, Guaiac Wood, Cashmere Wood and Mate; base notes are Leather, Siam Benzoin, Vanilla and Rock rose.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Celine Ripert
Celine Ripert is a French perfumer who has worked with Accendis, Annayake, and Blood Concept. She created the minimalist Accendis 0.1 and 0.2, as well as the feminine Annayake Her and masculine Annayake Him. Her work for Blood Concept includes bold scents like A Killer Vanilla and Ab Liquid Spice, showing a penchant for modern, edgy compositions.
Fragrance Notes
Reve Royal Nana.m by NANA.M 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.
Reve Royal Nana.m embodies the distinctive style of NANA.M while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Sovereign Archetype: Portrait of Reve Royal Nana.m
Essence
The one who favors Reve Royal Nana.m. is ruled by the Monarch archetype-an individual who embodies regality, self-possession, and an unwavering sense of personal authority. This is not the tyrant who demands obedience through fear, but the sovereign who commands respect through presence. The Monarch does not seek power over others; rather, they cultivate an inner kingdom where taste, dignity, and discernment reign supreme.
Reve Royal Nana.m., with its opulent blend of vanilla, amber, and floral richness, is a fragrance for those who understand luxury as an extension of self, not mere ostentation. The Monarch wears it not to impress, but because it aligns with their essence-warm yet untouchable, inviting yet formidable.
Style & Aesthetic
Their surroundings reflect their inner world: deliberate, curated, and unapologetically refined. Their home is not cluttered with trends but filled with objects that have earned their place-antique books, a single bold painting, furniture that whispers history rather than shouting modernity. They dress with the same precision: fabrics that feel like second skin, cuts that flatter without desperation, colors that suggest depth rather than scream for attention.
They move through life with a quiet magnetism. People notice them, not because they demand it, but because they carry themselves as if they belong wherever they are-and so others believe it too. Their taste in art, music, and literature leans toward the timeless: Baroque compositions, Renaissance portraits, poetry that wrestles with eternity rather than fleeting emotions.
Philosophy & Values
The Monarch’s philosophy is one of self-mastery before dominion. They do not seek to control others, but they refuse to be controlled by chaos, mediocrity, or the whims of the crowd. Their highest value is authenticity, not in the modern sense of unfiltered expression, but in the classical sense-being true to one’s highest self.
They believe in hierarchy, not of birth or wealth, but of effort and excellence. They respect those who have earned their place, disdain those who demand unearned privilege, and pity those who never strive for more. Their relationships are few but deep; they do not suffer fools, but for those they deem worthy, their loyalty is unshakable.
Relationships
The Monarch does not seek followers, but they attract them nonetheless. Their presence is a gravitational pull-people want their approval, their attention, their rare smile. They are not cruel, but they are selective. Romantic partners must be equals, or at least possess the potential to become so. They will not diminish themselves for love, but they will elevate those who prove deserving.
Friendships are alliances of mutual respect. They have little patience for idle gossip or emotional vampirism, but they will stand by those who share their values. Their greatest test in relationships is patience-they must learn that not everyone moves at their pace, thinks with their clarity, or holds themselves to their standards.
Shadow
Every crown has its weight, and the Monarch’s flaw is pride. When unbalanced, they slip into arrogance, dismissing others as unworthy rather than guiding them. They may grow isolated, mistaking solitude for strength and becoming rigid in their self-sufficiency.
Another shadow is aesthetic rigidity-the belief that only their way of beauty is valid. They may scorn what they deem vulgar or common, forgetting that even royalty must sometimes walk among the people to remain human. The greatest danger is not in being wrong, but in being unreachable-so polished that no one dares to touch them, so regal that no one remembers they, too, bleed.
Conclusion
Reve Royal Nana.m. is their essence distilled: a scent that is at once warm and untouchable, rich but never cloying. It does not scream; it lingers. It does not beg for attention; it assumes it will be given. In this, the Monarch finds not just a perfume, but a confirmation-they are, and have always been, sovereign.
Yet, the wise Monarch remembers: even the grandest throne is still just a chair. The true test of their reign is not in how they sit upon it, but in whether they can, at times, step down and walk among the world as flesh and blood.