No 10 Roam Odin
Fragrance Story
No 10 Roam by Odin is a Oriental fragrance for women and men. No 10 Roam was launched in 2013. The nose behind this fragrance is Jean Claude Delville. Top notes are Pepper and Saffron; middle notes are Coffee blossom and Ginger flower; base notes are Incense, Ebony Wood and Coconut Milk.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Jean Claude Delville
Jean Claude Delville is a perfumer with a diverse portfolio across many brands. He created fragrances such as Fatale Pink for Agent Provocateur, Rockford for Atkinsons, and multiple scents for Banana Republic including Classic and Wildbloom. He also worked on Amazing for Bill Blass and Darling for Boutique Perfumery.
Fragrance Notes
No 10 Roam Odin by Odin 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.
No 10 Roam Odin embodies the distinctive style of Odin while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Wanderer Archetype: Portrait of No 10 Roam Odin
Essence
The person who chooses No. 10 Roam Odin as their signature scent is, at their core, a Seeker-a soul in perpetual motion, driven by an insatiable hunger for experience. This fragrance, with its rugged leather, smoky vetiver, and faint whispers of distant spice, is not for those who crave comfort in the familiar. It is for the one who finds beauty in the untamed, who sees life as an endless frontier to be explored rather than a path to be dutifully followed.
The Seeker is an archetype of transformation, always questioning, always pushing beyond the horizon. They are not content with stagnation; they thrive on the tension between the known and the unknown. Yet, like all archetypes, the Seeker has a shadow-restlessness that borders on rootlessness, a dissatisfaction that can never be fully quelled.
Relationships
Their relationships are intense but often transient. They attract others with their magnetism-their stories, their unshakable independence-but struggle with the weight of expectation. They love deeply but fleetingly, fearing that permanence might trap them. Their partners often find themselves chasing a shadow, always a step behind their restless spirit.
Friends admire their fearlessness but sometimes resent their detachment. They are the ones who disappear for months, only to return with tales of hitchhiked rides and midnight conversations in foreign bars. They inspire but rarely reassure.
Shadow
The Seeker’s greatest strength-their refusal to be confined-is also their greatest flaw. In their quest for the next experience, they risk becoming the Fugitive, running not toward something but away from the stillness that might force them to confront themselves. Their avoidance of routine can become its own kind of prison, a cycle of motion without true growth.
They may pride themselves on their freedom, but true freedom is not just the absence of chains-it is the ability to choose when to stop. Without this balance, they risk becoming a ghost in their own life, always passing through, never truly inhabiting.
Conclusion
Their tastes are not dictated by trends but by a deeper resonance-a sense that what they choose must reflect their inner journey. They favor raw, textured materials: worn leather jackets, sturdy boots, linen that ages with travel. Their aesthetic is not polished but lived-in, as though each piece carries a story. They collect books not for display but for the ideas within, dog-earing pages and scribbling in margins. Music is an essential companion-perhaps the deep hum of blues or the raw energy of post-punk, sounds that echo their own refusal to be neatly categorized.
Philosophically, they reject dogma. They are drawn to thinkers who challenge convention-Nietzsche, Camus, Woolf-those who see life as an experiment rather than a doctrine. They believe in self-creation, in the idea that identity is not fixed but forged through experience. Yet this can make them resistant to commitment, always fearing that settling will dull their edge.