Violet Rose Nosegasm
Fragrance Story
Violet Rose by Nosegasm is a Oriental Woody fragrance for women and men. Violet Rose was launched in 2020. The nose behind this fragrance is Michael Boadi. Top notes are Violet Leaf, Thyme, Sicilian Bergamot and Lemon; middle notes are Amber, Sandalwood, Haitian Vetiver, Italian Orris Root, Sage, Cinnamon, Clove and Nutmeg; base notes are White Oud, Virginia Cedar, Musk, Guaiac Wood and Smoke.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Michael Boadi
Michael Boadi is the founder and perfumer behind the Bohdidharma brand, which focuses on natural and spiritual fragrance blends. His catalog includes diverse scents such as Arabian Bokhoor, Black Lapsang, and Golden Rose, often inspired by global traditions and botanical ingredients. Boadi’s work emphasizes mindfulness and the connection between scent and well-being.
Fragrance Notes
Violet Rose Nosegasm by Nosegasm 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.
Violet Rose Nosegasm embodies the distinctive style of Nosegasm while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Violet Rose Nosegasm
Essence
To wear Violet Rose Nosegasm is to declare oneself a sensualist, a seeker of beauty in all its forms. This fragrance-delicate yet intoxicating, floral yet mysterious-belongs to one who moves through life with an artist’s eye and a poet’s heart. They are The Lover, an archetype defined by passion, aesthetic devotion, and an unshakable belief in the transformative power of beauty.
This is not mere romanticism; it is a philosophy. For them, life must be felt deeply, tasted fully, experienced with an intensity that borders on the sacred. They reject the mundane, the utilitarian, the purely rational. Instead, they embrace the ephemeral-the way light dances on petals, the warmth of a shared glance, the lingering scent of roses after rain.
Style & Aesthetic
Their tastes are refined but never sterile. They surround themselves with objects that tell stories-antique perfume bottles, well-worn books of poetry, silk scarves that whisper of distant travels. Their home is a sanctuary of textures and hues, where every detail is deliberate yet never rigid. They understand that true beauty lies in imperfection, in the slight fray of a linen curtain, the faded ink of a love letter kept for decades.
In fashion, they favor flowing silhouettes, rich fabrics that move with the body, colors that evoke twilight gardens-deep violets, dusky roses, muted golds. They are not trend-driven but timeless, dressing for the pleasure of sensation rather than the approval of others.
Philosophy & Values
For them, beauty is not a luxury but a necessity, a force that elevates the soul. They believe in love as an art form, in pleasure as a moral good, in the senses as gateways to the divine. Their philosophy is one of immersion-they do not merely observe life; they inhabit it.
Yet this devotion is not without its dangers. Their values can tip into hedonism, their pursuit of the exquisite into decadence. They may disdain the practical, the ordinary, the unadorned-forgetting that even the most mundane moments hold their own quiet magic.
Relationships
In love, they are both muse and artist. They crave connection that is poetic, intense, almost mythic. Their relationships are not mere bonds but experiences, each one a chapter in an ever-unfolding story. They enchant with their presence, drawing others into their world of heightened emotion and sensory richness.
But here, too, lies their shadow. Their hunger for depth can become a demand, their idealism a burden. They may grow impatient with love that does not mirror their own intensity, dismissing quieter, steadier affections as inadequate. And when disillusioned, they retreat into melancholy, mourning lost fantasies rather than embracing the flawed, living reality before them.
Shadow
The Lover’s greatest strength-their capacity for deep feeling-is also their greatest peril. When unbalanced, they may slip into indulgence, using beauty as an escape rather than an awakening. They might lose themselves in nostalgia, chasing past pleasures instead of creating new ones. Or worse, they may become jaded, dismissing the world as too crude for their refined sensibilities.
Yet even in their excesses, there is something noble. Their flaws stem not from malice but from an overabundance of longing-a desire for life to be as luminous as they believe it can be.
Conclusion
To know them is to be reminded that existence is not merely endured but celebrated. They teach us that love, beauty, and passion are not frivolities but the very essence of being. And though they may stumble in their pursuit of the sublime, they do so with grace-for even their falls are part of the dance.
In the end, they are like their beloved fragrance: fleeting yet unforgettable, delicate yet profound. A whisper of violet, a breath of rose-a reminder that to live fully is to embrace both the ecstasy and the ache of being alive.