Shamal Nobile 1942

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2018
Strong
Sillage
Very Good
Longevity
Fall, Winter
Best Season
Evening, Special Occasion
Best For

Fragrance Story

Shamal by Nobile 1942 is a fragrance for women and men. Shamal was launched in 2018. The nose behind this fragrance is Chris Maurice. Top notes are Incense, Apple, Dates and Aromatic Notes; middle notes are Velvet and Amber; base notes are Musk and Woodsy Notes.

Composition Profile

amber 100%
fruity 85%
smoky 70%
musky 60%
powdery 50%
sweet 40%
woody 35%
balsamic 30%
fresh 25%
warm spicy 20%

About the Perfumer

Chris Maurice

Chris Maurice

Chris Maurice is a perfumer with a wide-ranging portfolio that includes work for Aqualis, Artal Perfumes, Assaf, Astrophil & Stella, Azman, and Bey Parfum. His creations include Egoli, Forbidden Rose, Darley, Love Is Lost, Moonage Daydream, Riad Jasmine, Song For A Wanderer, and Abyssoria. His style varies from floral and romantic to dark and mysterious.

Fragrance Notes

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Incense Incense
Apple Apple
Dates Dates
Aromatic Notes Aromatic Notes

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Velvet Velvet
Amber Amber

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Musk Musk
Woodsy Notes Woodsy Notes
Unique Character

Shamal Nobile 1942 by Nobile 1942 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

Shamal Nobile 1942 embodies the distinctive style of Nobile 1942 while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.

Character Profile

The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Shamal Nobile 1942

Essence

The one who chooses Shamal Nobile 1942 is not merely a wearer of fragrance-they are a seeker. The scent itself, with its blend of warm spices, dry woods, and the faintest whisper of arid earth, evokes the spirit of the Explorer, an archetype driven by curiosity, independence, and a hunger for the uncharted. This is not the restless wanderer who drifts without purpose, but the deliberate traveler who moves through life with an insatiable need to understand, to experience, to taste the world in all its complexity.

The Explorer thrives on discovery, both external and internal. They are drawn to the exotic, the rare, the overlooked. Their soul resonates with the vastness of deserts, the solitude of mountain peaks, the quiet intensity of a foreign city at dusk. They do not fear the unknown-they court it.

Yet, like all archetypes, the Explorer has a shadow. The same drive that propels them forward can leave them unmoored, unable to settle, always chasing the next horizon. They may struggle with commitment, mistaking familiarity for stagnation. Their thirst for novelty can become a hunger that is never satisfied.

Shadow

In their highest expression, the Explorer is fearless, adaptable, deeply alive. They remind others that life is not a script but an improvisation. They reject complacency, challenge dogma, and embody the idea that one must lose oneself to find oneself.

But the shadow lurks. Their avoidance of routine can become a refusal to endure the necessary drudgeries of life. Their love of solitude may harden into isolation. Their disdain for convention can curdle into contempt for those who find comfort in the ordinary.

Shamal Nobile 1942 is their scent because it is not sweet, not soft, not safe. It is the fragrance of open spaces, of winds that carry both promise and dust. It is the scent of someone who would rather be lost than trapped.

And perhaps, in the end, that is both their triumph and their tragedy.

Conclusion

Their tastes are eclectic, shaped by encounters rather than trends. They prefer the worn leather of a well-traveled journal to the gloss of a new smartphone. Their wardrobe is a curated collection of textures-linen, suede, aged brass-each piece carrying a story. They might own a single, perfectly tailored coat, worn for years, rather than a closet of fleeting fashions.

Philosophy is not an abstract exercise for them, but a lived experience. They are drawn to thinkers who challenge boundaries-Nietzsche’s call to self-overcoming, Camus’ embrace of the absurd, Rumi’s ecstatic wanderings. They believe wisdom is found in movement, in the friction between cultures, in the quiet moments of solitude beneath unfamiliar skies.

Relationships are both intense and transient. They attract others with their magnetism, their stories, their refusal to be confined. But they struggle with the mundane demands of long-term bonds. Their lovers and friends may feel like waypoints on a journey rather than destinations. Yet those who understand them know their loyalty is fierce-if fleeting.