Fragrance №21 Nikkos-oskol Fragrance
Fragrance Story
Fragrance №21 by Nikkos-Oskol Fragrance is a fragrance for women and men. Fragrance №21 was launched in 2012. The nose behind this fragrance is Alain Allione. Top notes are Lemon Verbena and Rosemary; middle notes are Mint and Eucalyptus; base notes are Thyme and Cypress.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Alain Allione
Alain Allione is a French perfumer known for his work with 12 Parfumeurs Francais, where he has created a diverse range of fragrances. His style balances classic elegance with modern sensibilities, often blending rich florals with warm, woody bases. Notable creations from our catalog include Intrigue De L’amour, La Destinee, and Le Charme, each reflecting his skill in crafting nuanced, wearable scents.
Fragrance Notes
Fragrance №21 Nikkos-oskol Fragrance by Nikkos-Oskol Fragrance 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.
Fragrance №21 Nikkos-oskol Fragrance embodies the distinctive style of Nikkos-Oskol Fragrance while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Fragrance №21 Nikkos-oskol Fragrance
Essence
To wear Fragrance №21 Nikkos-oskol is to embrace an essence both sensual and enigmatic-a scent that lingers like a whispered secret, neither heavy nor fleeting, but perfectly poised between warmth and mystery. The person who chooses this fragrance is one who lives through the senses, who finds meaning in beauty, and who seeks to merge the poetic with the tangible. They are, at their core, an embodiment of the Lover archetype-driven by passion, connection, and the pursuit of aesthetic and emotional fulfillment.
This is a person who moves through life with an artist’s sensitivity, attuned to the textures, colors, and emotions that others might overlook. Their tastes are refined but not ostentatious; they prefer the subtle allure of well-crafted things-vintage leather-bound books, the slow burn of a jazz record, the quiet luxury of linen and wool. Their style is deliberate, blending classic elegance with a hint of the unconventional, as if they are always slightly out of step with the mundane world.
Philosophically, they reject the purely utilitarian. Life, for them, is not merely to be endured but to be savored, to be experienced with intensity. They are drawn to Romanticism, to the idea that beauty is truth, and truth beauty. Their values revolve around authenticity-not in the crude sense of unfiltered expression, but in the deeper sense of aligning one’s outer life with inner longing. They despise pretense, yet they are not immune to it, for the Lover’s shadow is the fear of being unseen, unappreciated.
Style & Aesthetic
Their home is a sanctuary, a carefully curated space where every object tells a story. They might collect antique perfume bottles, rare vinyl, or handwritten letters from another era. They are drawn to the past not out of nostalgia but because they believe some things should not be forgotten.
Professionally, they thrive in fields that allow for creativity-art, design, writing, or even the slow, deliberate craft of perfumery itself. They are not suited for rigid corporate structures; they wither under bureaucracy. Money is secondary to meaning, though they are not immune to the occasional indulgence-fine wine, a perfectly tailored coat, a first edition of a beloved novel.
Relationships
In love and friendship, they are magnetic, drawing others in with an effortless charm that is neither manipulative nor calculated. They do not seduce for conquest but for communion-the Lover seeks to merge, to dissolve boundaries, if only for a moment. Their relationships are deep but often tumultuous, for they crave intensity, and routine is their enemy. They are the kind of lover who writes letters by candlelight, who remembers anniversaries not out of obligation but because they are rituals of devotion.
Yet, this very depth can become their undoing. The Lover’s shadow is possessiveness, the fear of losing what they hold dear. They may cling too tightly, suffocate with affection, or grow disillusioned when reality fails to match their idealized vision. Their relationships are a dance between ecstasy and melancholy-they love fiercely but suffer just as fiercely when love fades.
Shadow
The Lover’s greatest strength-their capacity for deep feeling-can also be their downfall. When unbalanced, they may become hedonistic, chasing pleasure to avoid emptiness. They might romanticize suffering, believing that pain is the price of beauty. There is a danger of self-absorption, of becoming so lost in their own emotional landscape that they neglect the practicalities of life.
They may also struggle with indecision, torn between too many loves, too many possibilities. The Lover fears commitment not out of coldness but because choosing one path means forsaking others-and to them, every path glimmers with potential enchantment.
Conclusion
To know this person is to witness a life lived with intentional passion. They are not without flaws-their intensity can burn too brightly, their idealism can blind them-but they are never dull, never indifferent. They remind us that existence is not merely to be survived but to be felt, deeply and without apology.
In the end, the Lover does not seek immortality but presence-to leave behind not monuments, but moments: a lingering scent, a half-remembered melody, the ghost of a touch that lingers long after they are gone.