Natori Natori
Fragrance Story
Natori by Natori is a Oriental Floral fragrance for women. Natori was launched in 2009. The nose behind this fragrance is Caroline Sabas. Top notes are Plum, Rose and Aldehydes; middle notes are Ylang-Ylang, Peony and Jasmine; base notes are Amber, Patchouli and Musk.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Caroline Sabas
Caroline Sabas is a prolific perfumer with a portfolio that includes Animale Instinct Homme Animale, Avon Luck Eau So Free Avon, and Badgley Mischka Couture Badgley Mischka. She has created numerous scents for Avon, such as Far Away Dreams and Little Sequin Dress. Her work also extends to Anthropologie's A Rather Novel Collection.
Fragrance Notes
Natori Natori by Natori 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.
Natori Natori embodies the distinctive style of Natori while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Natori Natori
Essence
To wear Natori Natori is to embrace an essence both delicate and bold-a fragrance that balances floral elegance with a whisper of sensuality. The person who chooses this scent is drawn to its duality: the softness of rose and peach, the warmth of amber and sandalwood. They are not merely someone who enjoys perfume; they are someone who lives through sensation, emotion, and connection. Their soul resonates most closely with the Lover archetype, a figure defined by passion, beauty, and the pursuit of deep, meaningful experiences.
Style & Aesthetic
This individual moves through the world with an innate appreciation for beauty in all its forms. Their surroundings are curated-not out of vanity, but because they understand that environment shapes emotion. Their home is a sanctuary of textures and scents: silk drapes that catch the light, fresh flowers in hand-blown glass, a well-worn book of poetry left open on the bedside table. They do not merely exist in a space; they inhabit it, molding it into an extension of their inner world.
Their taste in art, music, and literature leans toward the romantic, the evocative. They are drawn to the melancholy of Chopin’s nocturnes, the lush prose of Marguerite Duras, the aching beauty of a Botticelli painting. Yet theirs is not a passive appreciation-they engage with art as if it were a conversation, a way to understand the depths of human feeling.
Their wardrobe is an exercise in controlled allure. They favor fabrics that move with the body-cashmere, chiffon, fine leather. Their colors are rich but never garish: deep burgundies, midnight blues, the occasional shock of emerald green. They understand the power of subtlety; a single piece of heirloom jewelry says more than an armful of gaudy trinkets.
Yet there is a theatricality to them, a slight exaggeration in their gestures, as if they are always half-performing. This is not deceit-it is simply their way of engaging with the world, a refusal to be ordinary.
Philosophy & Values
For them, life is not about accumulation but intensity. They reject the hollow chase of status or material excess, seeking instead the richness of experience. Their philosophy is one of immersion: to love deeply, to feel fully, to savor the fleeting moments that others might overlook. They believe in the transformative power of connection-whether with a lover, a friend, or even a stranger who shares a single profound conversation.
Yet this very idealism can be their undoing. Their hunger for depth sometimes blinds them to the mundane necessities of life. Bills may go unpaid because they were lost in a novel; plans may be abandoned for a spontaneous night under the stars. They are not irresponsible by nature, but their soul rebels against anything that feels like drudgery.
Relationships
In love, they are both giver and seeker. They do not love lightly; when they commit, it is with their whole being. Their relationships are marked by a fierce loyalty and an almost poetic devotion. They remember anniversaries not out of obligation but because they cherish the symbolism-the way a shared memory can be held like a sacred object.
But the shadow of the Lover is possessiveness. Their capacity for deep attachment can curdle into neediness, an unspoken demand that their partner match their emotional intensity at all times. When hurt, they do not rage; they retreat into wounded silence, as if betrayal were not just a personal affront but a violation of the very order of beauty they hold dear.
Shadow
The Lover’s greatest weakness is their refusal to accept limits. They chase euphoria to the point of exhaustion, whether in romance, art, or even indulgence. A glass of wine becomes a bottle; a flirtation becomes an obsession. They fear boredom more than failure, and in their hunger for stimulation, they sometimes lose themselves.
Their other flaw is a quiet disdain for those who live superficially. They struggle to hide their impatience with small talk, with people who prioritize convenience over passion. This can make them seem aloof, even cruel, though they would never admit to such pettiness.
Conclusion
To love a person like this is to be swept into a world where every moment is charged with meaning. They are not always easy-their highs are high, their lows devastatingly quiet. But they remind us that life is not merely to be endured, but felt, in all its unbearable beauty.
They are the Lover, not in the trivial sense of romance, but in the ancient, sacred way-one who worships at the altar of experience, for whom even the scent of a perfume is a kind of prayer.