China White Nasomatto

For Women
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2008
Moderate
Sillage
Excellent
Longevity
Fall
Best Season
Evening
Best For

Fragrance Story

China White by Nasomatto is a Floral Woody Musk fragrance for women. China White was launched in 2008. The nose behind this fragrance is Alessandro Gualtieri.

Composition Profile

powdery 100%
woody 85%
floral 70%
musky 60%
rose 50%

About the Perfumer

Alessandro Gualtieri

Alessandro Gualtieri

Alessandro Gualtieri is an Italian perfumer and founder of the Nasomatto brand, known for his bold, unconventional approach to fragrance. His olfactory style emphasizes raw materials and intense, often provocative compositions that challenge traditional perfumery. Notable creations from our catalog include Nasomatto’s Absinth, Baraonda, and Blamage, as well as the MariaLux series and L’essence de Mastenbroek, all reflecting his signature dramatic and unapologetic aesthetic.

Fragrance Notes

All Notes

Complete scent profile

Powdery Notes Powdery Notes
Woodsy Notes Woodsy Notes
Musk Musk
Floral Notes Floral Notes
Rose Rose
Unique Character

China White Nasomatto by Nasomatto offers a distinctive olfactory experience that stands out from other fragrances in its category.

Artisanal Creation

Crafted with the finest ingredients and a blend of traditional and modern perfumery techniques, this fragrance represents the pinnacle of the perfumer's art.

Signature Style

China White Nasomatto embodies the distinctive style of Nasomatto while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.

Character Profile

The Alchemist Archetype: Portrait of China White Nasomatto

Essence

To wear China White by Nasomatto is to embrace contradiction-a fragrance that is at once delicate and narcotic, ephemeral yet intoxicating. The person who chooses this scent is not one who seeks to be easily understood. They are an enigma wrapped in silk, a modern-day alchemist who transmutes the mundane into the sublime. Their archetype is the Magician, the wielder of hidden knowledge, the conjurer of illusions, and the seeker of transformation.

The Magician is a figure of power-not brute force, but the quiet mastery of perception. This individual understands that reality is malleable, that identity is a construct, and that the right scent, the right word, the right gesture can alter the course of an encounter. They are drawn to China White because it is not merely a fragrance but an experience-a whisper of opium, a ghost of white florals, a suggestion of something forbidden. It does not announce itself; it unfolds, revealing layers only to those who pay attention.

Their philosophy is one of controlled revelation. They believe in the power of mystery, in the allure of the unsaid. They do not rush to fill silences; they let them linger, knowing that absence can be more potent than presence. Life, to them, is a series of carefully curated moments, each designed to evoke a reaction, a feeling, a transformation-whether in themselves or others.

Style & Aesthetic

Their aesthetic is one of understated elegance, a deliberate rejection of the obvious. They favor monochrome palettes-ivory, charcoal, the faintest blush of rose-colors that suggest rather than declare. Fabrics are tactile: cashmere that begs to be touched, silk that shifts with the light, leather worn smooth with time. Their wardrobe is not about trends but about texture, about how clothing feels against the skin as much as how it looks.

In art and music, they are drawn to the liminal-the spaces between notes in a Satie composition, the negative space in a Rothko painting, the silence after a whispered confession. They appreciate the beauty of restraint, the power of suggestion over exposition.

Their home is a sanctuary, a carefully constructed world where every object has meaning. A single orchid in a black vase, a shelf of well-worn books, a record player that spins vinyl with deliberate precision. They do not entertain often, but when they do, it is an event-dim lighting, curated playlists, cocktails mixed with the precision of a chemist.

They thrive in cities-places where anonymity is possible, where one can disappear into the crowd and reemerge as someone else. They are nocturnal by nature, most alive in the hours when the world quiets down and secrets feel closer to the surface.

Philosophy & Values

They do not believe in absolute truths but in the multiplicity of perspectives. Their values are fluid, shaped by intuition rather than dogma. They respect intelligence but despise pretension; they admire passion but distrust unchecked emotion. Their moral compass is guided by a deep curiosity about human nature-what drives people, what breaks them, what makes them surrender.

They are not religious, but they are deeply spiritual in their own way. They see the sacred in the profane, the divine in the mundane. A sip of tea, the curve of a lover’s spine, the way light filters through smoke-these are their rituals.

Relationships

They are magnetic but elusive, drawing people in without ever fully letting them in. Their relationships are intense but often short-lived, not out of cruelty but because they fear stagnation. They crave connection but resist possession. To love them is to accept that they will always hold something back, that there will always be a door left slightly ajar.

Their friendships are few but profound, built on mutual understanding rather than obligation. They are the confidant who listens without judgment, the advisor who offers not solutions but questions that lead to self-discovery.

Shadow

The Magician’s greatest strength is also their greatest flaw-their ability to manipulate perception. They can become so adept at crafting personas that they lose touch with their own authenticity. Their charm can turn to calculation, their mystery to evasion. They may grow so accustomed to being the observer that they forget how to be present in their own life.

Their fear of being truly known can make them cold, distant, even cruel in their detachment. They may toy with emotions, not out of malice but out of boredom, treating relationships as experiments rather than commitments. The very elusiveness that makes them fascinating can also leave them isolated, trapped in their own illusions.

Conclusion

The wearer of China White is neither saint nor sinner but something more complex-a being who exists in the liminal space between reality and fantasy. They are the Magician, the shape-shifter, the one who understands that identity is fluid and that power lies in the unseen.

They will always be searching-for the next transformation, the next revelation, the next fleeting moment of transcendence. And perhaps that is their destiny: not to arrive, but to wander, forever weaving spells in the dark.