Elysée Nuit O Boticário
Fragrance Story
Elysée Nuit by O Boticário is a Chypre Fruity fragrance for women. Elysée Nuit was launched in 2017. Elysée Nuit was created by Chiaki Nomura and Napoleão Bastos. Top notes are Red Fruits, Plum Blossom, Cassis and Bergamot; middle notes are Macarons, Rose, Peony, Magnolia, Freesia and Lily-of-the-Valley; base notes are Patchouli, Sandalwood, Musk and Vetiver.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Chiaki Nomura
Chiaki Nomura is a Japanese perfumer known for crafting evocative scents that often draw on natural and minimalist themes. She created Elysée Nuit for O Boticário, a warm and sensual fragrance, and Hinoki In Hinoki for Scents of Wood, which centers on the aromatic wood. Her work for Zoologist Perfumes includes Penguin, a fresh and aquatic composition inspired by the Antarctic bird.
Fragrance Notes
Elysée Nuit O Boticário by O Boticário 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.
Elysée Nuit O Boticário embodies the distinctive style of O Boticário while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Elysée Nuit O Boticário
Essence
The one who chooses Elysée Nuit O Boticário is ruled by The Lover-an archetype that thrives on passion, beauty, and the pursuit of deep emotional connections. This fragrance, with its blend of dark florals, vanilla, and musk, speaks to a soul who seeks intensity in all things: love, art, and experience. The Lover does not merely exist; they consume life, savoring its textures and shadows with equal fervor.
Yet, like all archetypes, The Lover has a shadow-an undercurrent of excess, a tendency to lose themselves in sensation, or to demand more from life than it can give. Their strength is their ability to enchant and inspire; their weakness is their refusal to settle for anything less than the sublime.
Style & Aesthetic
Their world is one of curated beauty. They surround themselves with objects that evoke emotion-antique books, rich fabrics, dim lighting that transforms ordinary evenings into something cinematic. Their taste leans toward the romantic but never the saccharine; they prefer depth over prettiness. In music, they are drawn to the melancholic strains of jazz or the haunting melodies of classical nocturnes. In literature, they favor poets like Rilke or Pessoa, who blur the line between love and longing.
Their personal style is deliberate-effortless elegance with a hint of mystery. They might wear deep burgundies or blacks, fabrics that drape rather than cling, as if they are always half-hidden in twilight. They move through spaces with quiet confidence, leaving traces of their scent behind them like an unspoken invitation.
Philosophy & Values
For them, life is not about happiness in the conventional sense, but about meaning-moments that pierce the soul. They believe in love as a transformative force, in art as a necessity rather than a luxury. Their philosophy is one of immersion: to feel deeply is to live truly.
Yet this very idealism can become their undoing. When reality fails to match their inner visions, they may retreat into fantasy or grow disillusioned. Their shadow whispers that no love is deep enough, no beauty perfect enough-leading to cycles of dissatisfaction.
Relationships
In love, they are both muse and artist. They do not merely want a partner; they want a collaborator in passion. Their relationships are intense, marked by poetic gestures and whispered confessions. They thrive on emotional depth, but their hunger for connection can sometimes suffocate those who cannot match their fervor.
Friendships, too, are chosen with care-they seek those who understand the language of nuance, who can discuss philosophy over wine at midnight. Superficial bonds hold no interest for them.
Shadow
The Lover’s greatest flaw is their refusal of moderation. They may mistake intensity for truth, believing that only what overwhelms the senses is real. This can lead to destructive patterns-chasing after unavailable loves, romanticizing pain, or withdrawing when the world fails to meet their expectations.
Yet even their shadows hold wisdom. Their excesses teach them the limits of desire; their disillusionments force them to reconcile the ideal with the real. In time, they may learn that beauty exists not only in the grand and dramatic, but in the quiet, the imperfect, the fleeting.
Conclusion
The wearer of Elysée Nuit O Boticário is a seeker-one who walks the line between ecstasy and melancholy, always searching for the next spark of feeling. They are both blessed and cursed by their sensitivity, for they feel the world more deeply than most. But in that depth lies their power: to remind others that life, at its best, is not just lived, but felt.
And so they continue, leaving traces of their scent in the air-a reminder that even in the darkest night, there is beauty waiting to be found.