Fig And Blackcurrant Nimere Parfums
Fragrance Story
Fig and Blackcurrant by Nimere Parfums is a fragrance for women and men. Fig and Blackcurrant was launched in 2015. The nose behind this fragrance is Nikolay Eremin. Top notes are Fig, Black currant leaf, Tangerine and Galbanum; middle notes are Black Currant, Ylang-Ylang and Dried Fruits; base notes are Tonka Bean, Myrrh, Honey, Guaiac Wood and Tolu Balsam.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Nikolay Eremin
Nikolay Eremin is a perfumer with a diverse portfolio including Aurora Borealis' Polar Night, Ladanika's Russian Fairytale, and multiple Nimere Parfums releases such as A Trace From A Sweet Kiss, Avowal, Cafe Italy, Caramel Lover, Carmen, and Courtesan's Intrigues. His scents often blend gourmand, floral, and oriental elements. He works across both niche and accessible fragrance lines.
Fragrance Notes
Fig And Blackcurrant Nimere Parfums by Nimere Parfums 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.
Fig And Blackcurrant Nimere Parfums embodies the distinctive style of Nimere Parfums while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Fig And Blackcurrant Nimere Parfums
Essence
This person is most closely aligned with The Hedonist, an archetype that seeks beauty, pleasure, and sensory richness in all things. The Hedonist does not merely consume life-they savor it, extracting meaning from texture, scent, and taste. Fig and Blackcurrant, with its lush, velvety sweetness tempered by earthy depth, is their signature because it mirrors their own nature: indulgent yet grounded, ripe with sensuality but never cloying.
They are not a passive pleasure-seeker, but an active connoisseur of life’s finer sensations. Their philosophy is simple: To feel deeply is to live fully. Yet beneath this lies a quiet defiance-a refusal to let austerity or convention dictate their joys.
Style & Aesthetic
Their surroundings are curated with deliberate decadence-soft fabrics, warm lighting, art that invites touch. They favor deep greens, burgundies, and blacks, colors that suggest both opulence and mystery. Their home smells of aged wine, leather-bound books, and the faintest trace of incense.
In fashion, they prefer garments that drape and flow, fabrics that whisper against the skin. Silk, cashmere, and well-worn leather are staples. Their style is not ostentatious but quietly luxurious, as if they dress for their own pleasure rather than external approval.
They collect experiences like rare wines: a midnight swim under a full moon, a perfectly ripe fig eaten straight from the tree, the slow burn of a well-aged whiskey. Music is felt viscerally-jazz, blues, or sultry electronica that moves through the body like a second pulse.
Philosophy & Values
They reject the notion that pleasure is shallow. For them, sensuality is a form of wisdom-a way of knowing the world that bypasses cold rationality. They believe in carpe diem, but not in the reckless sense; rather, they seize moments with deliberate reverence.
Their values are rooted in authenticity. They despise pretense, preferring raw honesty over polished politeness. If they love, they love fiercely; if they disdain, they do so without apology. Their loyalty is earned through shared intensity-those who understand the sacredness of a perfectly timed kiss, a perfectly blended scent.
Yet their pursuit of pleasure is not without discipline. They know that true indulgence requires restraint-too much of anything dulls the senses. They balance their hedonism with periods of solitude, fasting, or silence, knowing that absence heightens desire.
Relationships
They do not love lightly. Relationships, for them, are immersive experiences-emotional, intellectual, and physical. They crave partners who match their depth, who can engage in a conversation that lingers like the aftertaste of dark chocolate.
Their magnetism is undeniable. They draw others in with an effortless allure, but they are selective. Superficial connections bore them; they want lovers and friends who can plunge into the depths with them. Yet this intensity can be overwhelming-some find their passion too consuming, their standards too exacting.
In friendship, they are generous but demanding. They expect those close to them to appreciate life with the same fervor. Those who disappoint-who choose safety over sensation-are gently but firmly relegated to the periphery.
Shadow
Even the most refined hedonist risks tipping into decadence. When unbalanced, their pursuit of pleasure can become compulsive, a way to escape rather than engage. They may indulge to the point of numbness, seeking ever-greater thrills to feel alive.
Their disdain for mediocrity can curdle into elitism. They may grow impatient with those who do not share their tastes, dismissing simpler joys as beneath them. At worst, they become jaded, mistaking cynicism for sophistication.
Their need for intensity can also lead to self-destruction. They flirt with danger-emotional, physical, even existential-because the edge is where they feel most awake. But the line between living deeply and courting ruin is thin, and they do not always recognize when they’ve crossed it.
Conclusion
This is a person who lives at the intersection of elegance and abandon. Their love for Fig and Blackcurrant is no accident-it is the scent of a soul that refuses to be half-alive. They are poets of sensation, architects of moments that shimmer with meaning.
Yet their greatest challenge is balance-to revel without losing themselves, to love without consuming, to taste life without demanding it always be sweet. When they succeed, they embody a rare kind of wisdom: that pleasure, in its purest form, is not escape, but transcendence.