Floratta Fleur D' Éclipse O Boticário
Fragrance Story
Floratta Fleur d' Éclipse by O Boticário is a Floral Woody Musk fragrance for women. This is a new fragrance. Floratta Fleur d' Éclipse was launched in 2022. Floratta Fleur d' Éclipse was created by Carlos Benaïm and Natasha Côté. Top notes are Pink Pepper, Litchi, Pear, Custard and Bergamot; middle notes are Turkish Rose, Magnolia, Osmanthus and Ylang-Ylang; base notes are Musk, Patchouli, Vetiver and Amber.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Carlos Benaïm
Carlos Benaïm is a perfumer with a diverse portfolio spanning A Lab on Fire, Alfred Dunhill, and Aramis. He created Liquidnight for A Lab on Fire and Century for Alfred Dunhill. His work also includes Quorum for Antonio Puig and Havana Pour Elle for Aramis.
Fragrance Notes
Floratta Fleur D' Éclipse 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.
Floratta Fleur D' Éclipse 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 Floratta Fleur D' Éclipse O Boticário
Essence
The one who chooses Floratta Fleur D'Éclipse is ruled by the Lover archetype, though not in its most carnal or tempestuous form. This is a Lover who worships beauty in its most delicate, luminous manifestations-soft petals unfurling at dusk, the fleeting warmth of a fading sunset, the quiet intimacy of shared laughter. Their soul is drawn to the ephemeral, the tender, the things that must be cherished before they dissolve into memory.
This fragrance-floral, luminous, with whispers of vanilla and jasmine-mirrors their essence. It does not demand attention but lingers, leaving an imprint like the last glow of twilight. They are not the seductress, nor the tragic romantic, but the one who finds ecstasy in the small, sacred moments of life.
Philosophy & Values
They do not worship at the altar of productivity or power. Their rebellion is subtler: they insist on feeling deeply in a world that often rewards numbness. They believe in the sacredness of small joys, in the radical act of tenderness. To them, a life without aesthetic pleasure, without love-both given and received-is a life half-lived.
Yet, they are not naive. They understand darkness exists, but they choose-sometimes stubbornly-to focus on the light. This is their defiance.
Shadow
But the Lover’s greatest strength is also their vulnerability. Their devotion to beauty can slip into escapism, a reluctance to face the harsher textures of reality. When life becomes too abrasive-when love disappoints, when the world feels coarse-they may retreat into a self-constructed paradise, a gilded cage of their own making.
They are prone to idealization, seeing people and moments as more perfect than they are. A lover becomes a demigod, a friendship an unbreakable bond-until reality intrudes, and the disillusionment cuts deep. Their avoidance of conflict can leave important words unspoken, resentment simmering beneath a serene facade.
And then there is the fear of impermanence. They know too well that all things fade-youth, passion, even memory. Sometimes, this knowledge paralyzes them, making them cling too tightly to what cannot be held. They must learn that beauty is not only in the fleeting, but in the act of letting go.
Conclusion
Their world is an aesthetic sanctuary. They surround themselves with textures that beg to be touched-velvet cushions, silk scarves, the worn pages of poetry collections. Their home is a curated dream: fresh flowers in glass vases, candles that cast honeyed light, photographs of loved ones framed in gold. They do not chase trends but cultivate an atmosphere of quiet elegance, where every object holds meaning.
They move through life with a kind of graceful intentionality, seeking experiences that stir their senses. A morning spent sipping rose tea in the garden, an afternoon wandering through an art gallery, an evening lost in the melancholic chords of a piano sonata-these are their rituals. They are drawn to art that speaks of longing and transcendence, to literature that explores the fragility of human connection.
In relationships, they are deeply attuned to emotional undercurrents. They listen not just to words but to pauses, to the way someone’s fingers might tighten around a wine glass when speaking of loss. They love fiercely but not possessively; their affection is a gift, not a chain. Yet, they expect reciprocity-not in grand gestures, but in the unspoken understanding that love is an act of mutual devotion.