Une Ile, Un Reve Nana.m
Fragrance Story
Une Ile, un Reve by NANA.M is a Floral fragrance for women. Une Ile, un Reve was launched in 2015. The nose behind this fragrance is Céline Ripert. Top notes are Eucalyptus, Rosemary and Rock rose; middle notes are Ylang-Ylang, Tuberose, Moroccan Jasmine and Orange; base notes are Siam Benzoin, Beeswax, Vanilla and Patchouli.
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
Character Profile
The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Une Ile, Un Reve Nana.m
Essence
This person is most closely aligned with the Mystic-a seeker of hidden truths, a wanderer between worlds, one who finds meaning in the intangible. The fragrance Une Île, Un Rêve ("An Island, A Dream") evokes an escape into reverie, a place where reality softens at the edges. Like the scent-a blend of salty air, driftwood, and delicate florals-they are drawn to the liminal, the spaces between waking and dreaming, land and sea. The Mystic does not merely observe life but interprets it, searching for symbols, omens, and deeper currents beneath the surface.
Shadow
Their greatest strength is their imagination-an ability to see beyond the obvious, to find magic in the ordinary. They are the friend who notices the way light filters through leaves, who remembers dreams in vivid detail, who speaks in metaphors that linger long after the conversation ends. They bring a sense of wonder to those around them, a reminder that life is more than utility and routine.
Yet their shadow is evasion. The same mind that conjures beauty can also construct elaborate escapes from responsibility. They may romanticize melancholy, mistaking inertia for depth. Their relationships suffer when they refuse to anchor themselves in the present, preferring the safety of abstraction. At their worst, they become ghosts-present but untouchable, drifting just out of reach.
Conclusion
Their tastes are refined but never ostentatious. They prefer worn linen over stiff silk, aged paperbacks with dog-eared pages over pristine hardcovers. Their home is a sanctuary of muted tones-soft blues, weathered whites, the occasional dried branch in a ceramic vase. They collect seashells not for their beauty alone, but for the stories they carry: the whisper of tides, the memory of distant shores.
Philosophy is not an abstract exercise for them but a way of breathing. They are drawn to thinkers like Camus and Pessoa, who wrestle with meaning in an indifferent universe. They do not seek answers so much as they savor the questions. Their values are fluid, shaped by intuition rather than dogma. They believe in kindness, but not naively-they know darkness exists, yet choose to face it with quiet defiance.
Relationships are both their sanctuary and their challenge. They crave deep, soulful connections but often retreat when intimacy demands too much grounding in the mundane. They love fiercely but sporadically, disappearing into their inner world without warning. Their partners must understand that solitude is not rejection but a necessity-a return to the island of the self.