Megamare Orto Parisi
Fragrance Story
Megamare by Orto Parisi is a Aromatic Aquatic fragrance for women and men. Megamare was launched in 2019. The nose behind this fragrance is Alessandro Gualtieri. Top notes are Bergamot and Lemon; middle notes are Seaweed, Calone and Hedione; base notes are Musk, Ambroxan and Cedar.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Alessandro Gualtieri
Alessandro Gualtieri is an Italian perfumer and founder of the Nasomatto brand, known for his bold, unconventional approach to fragrance. His olfactory style emphasizes raw materials and intense, often provocative compositions that challenge traditional perfumery. Notable creations from our catalog include Nasomatto’s Absinth, Baraonda, and Blamage, as well as the MariaLux series and L’essence de Mastenbroek, all reflecting his signature dramatic and unapologetic aesthetic.
Fragrance Notes
Megamare Orto Parisi by Orto Parisi 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.
Megamare Orto Parisi embodies the distinctive style of Orto Parisi while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Megamare Orto Parisi
Essence
The one who chooses Megamare Orto Parisi as their scent is not merely drawn to a fragrance-they are called by it. This is no delicate floral whisper, no tame citrus sparkle; this is the untamed ocean in a bottle, a scent of salt, seaweed, and the abyss. The archetype that best defines them is The Seafarer-a wanderer of the deep, both literally and metaphorically. They are Odysseus without the homecoming, a restless soul who finds solace in the vastness of the unknown.
The Seafarer is not content with the shallows. They crave the storm, the mystery, the raw power of nature. Megamare mirrors this: it is uncompromising, almost feral in its intensity. The wearer does not seek to be liked-they seek to be remembered, to leave an impression as indelible as the scent itself.
Style & Aesthetic
Their style is elemental, unpolished yet deliberate. They favor textures that evoke the sea-linen that wrinkles like waves, leather worn by salt and wind, jewelry made of driftwood or rough-hewn stone. Their home, if they have one, is sparse but meaningful: shells on windowsills, maps on walls, books on shipwrecks and lost civilizations.
They prefer music that feels vast-post-rock soundscapes, the deep hum of cellos, the eerie silence between notes. Their taste in literature leans toward Melville, Conrad, and Woolf’s The Waves-stories of solitude and the sublime. They do not consume art passively; they immerse themselves in it, as if diving into another world.
Philosophy & Values
Their life is one of movement, of seeking. Stability is not their natural state; they thrive in transition, in the moments between destinations. They may be drawn to careers that involve travel, exploration, or the study of the unknown-marine biology, sailing, photography of remote places. Even if their work is mundane, their mind is always elsewhere, dreaming of horizons unseen.
Their philosophy is one of embracing the uncontrollable. They do not believe in taming life but in surrendering to its currents. They admire Nietzsche’s amor fati-love of fate-because they understand that resistance is futile against the tides of existence. They are not reckless, but neither are they cautious. They move with the confidence of one who has faced the abyss and found it beautiful.
Relationships
They love deeply but distantly. Their relationships are marked by intensity followed by absence-not out of cruelty, but necessity. They cannot be anchored for long without feeling stifled. Partners who need constant reassurance will drown in their unpredictability, but those who understand their need for freedom will find a loyalty as deep as the ocean itself.
Their friendships are few but fierce. They attract fellow wanderers, those who speak in metaphors and understand silence as a form of communication. They are the friend who disappears for months, then returns with stories that sound like myths.
Shadow
The Seafarer’s strength is also their flaw. Their love of the unknown can become a fear of the known-commitment, routine, the mundane responsibilities of life. They risk becoming eternal drifters, never allowing themselves to be truly seen, always fleeing before intimacy solidifies.
There is also a danger of romanticizing isolation. They may mistake loneliness for independence, solitude for strength. The ocean does not care for those who sail upon it; in their quest to be untamed, they may forget that even the wildest seas have shores.
Conclusion
The ideal Seafarer learns to navigate both the tempest and the calm. They recognize that depth is not only found in the open ocean but also in the quiet harbor. Megamare is not just a scent of chaos-it is also one of profound stillness, the moment after the storm when the water is clear and the world feels new.
To wear Megamare is to accept the duality of existence: the beauty and the terror, the freedom and the solitude. The Seafarer who embraces both is not just a wanderer-they become a sage of the deep, one who has seen the extremes and returned with wisdom.
They are not lost. They are exactly where they need to be.