Wild Hibiscus Patrice Martin

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2024

At a glance

Is Wild Hibiscus Patrice Martin worth trying?

Wild Hibiscus by Patrice Martin is a Floral Fruity fragrance for women and men.

Best match
Casual wear in Spring, Summer
Performance feel
Good longevity with Moderate sillage
Signature profile
floral, woody, fruity with Black Currant, Dried Fruits, Mint

The first impression

Wild Hibiscus by Patrice Martin is a Floral Fruity fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Wild Hibiscus was launched in 2024. The nose behind this fragrance is Shadi Samra. Top notes are Black Currant, Dried Fruits, Mint and Pear; middle notes are Peony, Hibiscus, Rose, Iris, Cinammon and Osmanthus; base notes are Musk, Ambergris, Sandalwood, Vanilla, Leather, Woody Notes and Cedar.

What shapes the scent

floral 100%
woody 85%
fruity 70%
powdery 60%
fresh 50%
musky 40%
rose 35%
animalic 30%
amber 25%

The perfumer behind it

Shadi Samra

Shadi Samra

Shadi Samra is a perfumer who has developed fragrances for both AAWED and AZD brands. His AAWED creations include Great Ocean Road, La Foce Vita, and Meguro River, while for AZD he crafted Sino and Smoke. Samra's work spans a variety of inspirations, from natural landscapes to abstract concepts.

Notes pyramid

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Black Currant Black Currant
Dried Fruits Dried Fruits
Mint Mint
Pear Pear

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Peony Peony
Hibiscus Hibiscus
Rose Rose
Iris Iris
Cinammon Cinammon
Osmanthus Osmanthus

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Musk Musk
Ambergris Ambergris
Sandalwood Sandalwood
Vanilla Vanilla
Leather Leather
Woody Notes Woody Notes
Cedar Cedar

The mood it creates

The Explorer Archetype: Portrait of Wild Hibiscus Patrice Martin

Essence

The Explorer thrives on discovery, treating life as a series of vibrant encounters. Wild Hibiscus captures this spirit with its bold hibiscus and cinnamon heart, buoyed by juicy pear and black currant. Like a traveler's journal filled with pressed blossoms, the scent mingles exoticism and familiarity.

Ambergris and leather in the base suggest well-worn passports and sun-bleached maps. This is a fragrance for those who see borders as invitations, its osmanthus and sandalwood whispering of markets where spices scent the air.

Style & Aesthetic

Their closet bursts with color-blocked tunics, embroidered vests, and broken-in boots. A single earring from Marrakech dangles beside a modern titanium watch-emblems of journeys physical and intellectual. They favor natural fabrics that breathe during long walks.

Home is a collage of finds: a Balinese mask beside a Nordic ceramic, shelves sagging with travelogues. The space smells faintly of dried mint and cedar, echoes of the fragrance's adventurous soul.

Philosophy & Values

They measure life in sunrises witnessed and strangers who became friends. The hibiscus note symbolizes their belief in blooming wherever planted, while the musk-vanilla drydown speaks of collecting memories like seashells.

For them, curiosity is moral imperative. The cinnamon's warmth reflects their conviction that borders are human illusions; the pear's freshness, their optimism that the next horizon always holds wonder.

Relationships

They attract fellow wanderers, bonding over shared tales of missed trains and midnight feasts. Romances are passionate but often brief-like the fragrance's fruity top notes-though some deepen into leather-and-sandalwood permanence.

Friends know them as the one who sends postcards with sand still clinging to the ink. Their laughter carries the brightness of the scent's mint top note, unexpected and revitalizing.

Lifestyle

They work seasonal jobs or remote gigs, always eyeing the next departure date. Mornings might find them sipping espresso in Lisbon or practicing tai chi in a Kyoto park, the hibiscus scent rising from their skin in the humid air.

Their bag always contains: a sketchpad, a vial of the perfume, and a handful of cinnamon sticks from some far-off souk.

Shadow

Restlessness can become avoidance; the very openness that fuels them may prevent deep roots. Like the fragrance's fleeting pear note, they sometimes disappear before others truly know them.

At worst, they confuse motion with growth, collecting experiences like the dried fruits in the scent without ever tasting their sweetness fully.

Conclusion

Wild Hibiscus is liquid wanderlust-a passport stamped with floral and spice. It suits the Explorer who understands that every return home is just a prelude to leaving again, and that the richest journeys leave traces of musk and memory.