Rs No.9 Nirvana Brands
Fragrance Story
RS No.9 by Nirvana Brands is a Oriental Woody fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. RS No.9 was launched in 2024. The nose behind this fragrance is Catherine Selig. Top notes are Lemon and Bergamot; middle notes are Leather, Oak and Labdanum; base notes are Oud, Musk and Patchouli.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Catherine Selig
Catherine Selig is a senior perfumer at Firmenich, known for her versatile work across designer and niche brands. Her style balances modern freshness with rich, textured accords, often blending floral, woody, and gourmand elements. She created the bold, spicy-woody Eilish No. 2 for Billie Yeish and the powdery elegance of Banana Republic’s Orris Vanille.
Fragrance Notes
Rs No.9 Nirvana Brands by Nirvana Brands 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.
Rs No.9 Nirvana Brands embodies the distinctive style of Nirvana Brands while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Rs No.9 Nirvana Brands
Essence
The one who wears RS No.9 Nirvana is a modern-day Hedonist-a seeker of pleasure, beauty, and sensory transcendence. This fragrance, with its intoxicating blend of warmth, spice, and depth, mirrors their soul: unapologetically indulgent, yet with a quiet, almost spiritual reverence for the ecstasies of life. They are not merely a pleasure-seeker but a connoisseur of experience, someone who understands that joy is not frivolous but a necessary art.
Their philosophy is simple yet profound: To feel is to live, and to live is to feel deeply. They reject asceticism, seeing it as a denial of life’s richness, yet they are not mere gluttons. Their hedonism is refined, almost sacred-an alchemy of sensation and meaning.
Shadow
Yet, like all archetypes, the Hedonist has a shadow. Their pursuit of pleasure can tip into escapism-a refusal to face the duller, harder parts of life. When discomfort arises, they reach for another glass, another lover, another distraction. They may mistake intensity for depth, believing that if something does not feel profound, it is not worth their time.
Their relationships, though passionate, can lack endurance. They crave novelty, the thrill of the new, and may grow restless when the initial fire dims. They fear boredom more than failure, stagnation more than pain. And beneath their radiant exterior, there is sometimes a quiet dread-what if, when the music stops, there is nothing left but silence?
Conclusion
Their tastes are decadent but deliberate. They prefer deep red wines over cheap liquor, jazz over pop, worn leather-bound books over digital screens. Their home is a sanctuary of textures-velvet drapes, Persian rugs, the scent of aged paper and sandalwood lingering in the air. They dress with an effortless elegance: silk shirts, tailored coats, perhaps a single bold accessory-a signet ring, a vintage watch-that speaks of history and intention.
They are drawn to art that stirs the senses-Caravaggio’s chiaroscuro, Nina Simone’s smoky voice, the poetry of Rumi or Baudelaire. They do not merely consume; they savor. Even their vices-dark chocolate, cigars, late-night conversations-are rituals, not habits.