Banana Splush Ori Russo
Fragrance Story
Banana Splush by Ori Russo is a Floral Fruity Gourmand fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Banana Splush was launched in 2024. The nose behind this fragrance is Nina Lamaison. Top notes are Caramel, Banana, Condensed Milk and Toffee; middle notes are Chestnut, Brown sugar, Banana, Dulce de leche and Vanilla; base notes are Suede, Ambroxan, White Chocolate, Madagascar Vanilla and White Musk.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Nina Lamaison
Nina Lamaison is a perfumer who has created fragrances for multiple brands, including Albarracín Parfums, Gonzel, Guillermo Parfum, JOI, and Moset. Her portfolio features scents like Sempiterno, Close To Me, The Lover's Dream, The Man Who I Am, Puro Rom, Amaranto, L'iris, and Libra. Lamaison's work spans a variety of styles, from romantic and dreamy to bold and character-driven.
Fragrance Notes
Character Profile
The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Banana Splush Ori Russo
Essence
To wear Banana Splush Ori Russo is to embrace a fragrance that is playful yet decadent, sweet but with an undercurrent of depth-a scent that refuses to be taken too seriously yet demands attention. The person who chooses this fragrance is not merely drawn to its tropical warmth or its creamy, almost edible richness; they are drawn to the way it embodies indulgence without apology. This is the essence of The Lover, an archetype defined by passion, pleasure, and the pursuit of beauty in all its forms.
Style & Aesthetic
Their world is one of sensory delight-textures, flavors, colors, and scents are not just experienced but savored. They surround themselves with lush fabrics, vibrant art, and music that thrums with rhythm. Their style is bold but never garish; they know how to balance extravagance with restraint. A silk blouse in deep amber, a velvet jacket in midnight blue-each choice is deliberate, an extension of their desire to be seen, touched, remembered.
They are drawn to the theatrical, not in the sense of performance, but in the way life itself can be a stage for beauty. Their home is an extension of this philosophy: dim lighting, rich tapestries, a carefully curated collection of objects that tell stories-antique perfume bottles, a well-worn poetry book, a bowl of ripe fruit always within reach.
Philosophy & Values
For them, pleasure is not frivolous-it is a form of wisdom. They reject the puritanical notion that joy must be earned or that desire should be tempered. Instead, they believe in the sacredness of the senses, in the idea that to deny oneself pleasure is to deny a fundamental truth of existence.
This philosophy extends beyond the physical. They seek intensity in conversation, in love, in ideas. They are the kind of person who lingers over a shared bottle of wine, discussing philosophy long into the night, not to debate but to feel the weight of thought. Their relationships are deep, often passionate, but they are not possessive-they understand that love, like fragrance, is meant to be experienced, not contained.
Shadow
Yet, like all archetypes, The Lover has its shadow. Their pursuit of pleasure can tip into hedonism, their love of beauty into vanity. There is a danger in living too much for the moment, in mistaking sensation for substance. They may grow restless when life demands routine, when love settles into something quieter and less intoxicating.
Their greatest flaw is perhaps their occasional lack of discernment-what begins as an open heart can become indiscriminate desire. They may mistake infatuation for love, novelty for depth. And when the thrill fades, they may find themselves searching for the next intoxication, the next rush of feeling, rather than sitting with the quieter, more enduring forms of connection.
Conclusion
To know them is to know someone who refuses to live half-heartedly. They are the friend who drags you to a midnight jazz club, the lover who leaves perfume on your pillow, the thinker who argues that joy is as profound as sorrow. They are flawed, yes-prone to indulgence, sometimes reckless with their own heart-but they are also radiant in their refusal to dim their light for the comfort of others.
In the end, they are a reminder: life is not merely to be endured, but to be tasted, to be worn like a fragrance that lingers long after they’ve left the room.