Paul Smith Rose Paul Smith
Fragrance Story
Paul Smith Rose by Paul Smith is a Floral fragrance for women. Paul Smith Rose was launched in 2007. The nose behind this fragrance is Antoine Maisondieu. Top notes are Rose, Green Tea and Violet; middle notes are Turkish Rose and Magnolia; base notes are Musk and Cedar.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Antoine Maisondieu
Antoine Maisondieu is a French perfumer and a senior vice president at Givaudan, where he has worked for decades. He is known for creating refined, modern compositions that balance natural elegance with subtle complexity. His work includes the woody, leathery Bottega Veneta Pour Homme and the fresh, floral Acqua di Parma Magnolia Nobile.
Fragrance Notes
Paul Smith Rose Paul Smith by Paul Smith 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.
Paul Smith Rose Paul Smith embodies the distinctive style of Paul Smith while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Paul Smith Rose Paul Smith
Essence
The person who cherishes Paul Smith Rose is, at their core, a Lover-one of Jung’s most potent archetypes. The Lover is defined by passion, sensuality, and a deep appreciation for beauty in all its forms. This fragrance, with its delicate yet persistent rose, softened by green tea and musk, speaks to someone who values elegance without ostentation, romance without sentimentality. They are drawn to the interplay of softness and strength, much like the rose itself-a flower both tender and thorned.
Style & Aesthetic
Their aesthetic is refined but never rigid. They prefer understatement over flamboyance, favoring clean lines, natural textures, and a muted color palette-soft pinks, deep greens, warm neutrals. Their wardrobe is a careful curation of timeless pieces: a well-tailored blazer, a silk scarf, leather boots worn just enough to show character. They appreciate craftsmanship, whether in a hand-bound book, a vintage record, or a perfectly brewed cup of Earl Grey.
In art, they are drawn to impressionism-the way light dances on water, the fleeting beauty of a moment captured in brushstrokes. Music is an intimate affair: jazz for its improvisational soul, classical for its precision, folk for its raw storytelling. They do not chase trends but seek what resonates, what stirs something within them.
Philosophy & Values
For them, life is not about accumulation but experience. They believe in savoring-the first sip of wine, the quiet of an early morning, the weight of a lover’s gaze. They value authenticity above all, despising pretense or superficial charm. Their relationships are built on emotional honesty, though they guard their own vulnerabilities carefully.
They are drawn to philosophy that explores human connection-Rilke’s Letters to a Young Poet, Camus’ meditations on love and rebellion, the Taoist principle of flowing with the natural order. They reject cynicism but are not naive; they understand darkness exists but choose to focus on what elevates the spirit.
Relationships
In love, they are both tender and fiercely independent. They crave deep connection but resist possessiveness. Their ideal partner is someone who understands the balance between closeness and freedom-someone who can share silence as easily as conversation. They are slow to trust but, once committed, are loyal and attentive.
Friendships are few but profound. They prefer small gatherings to crowded parties, meaningful dialogue over small talk. They are the confidant, the one who listens with full presence, offering insight only when asked. Their warmth is genuine, but they are selective with their energy.
Shadow
The Lover’s strength is also their weakness. Their pursuit of beauty can slip into hedonism-indulging too deeply in sensory pleasures, losing themselves in wine, music, or romance to escape discomfort. They may avoid conflict, smoothing over tensions with charm rather than facing difficult truths.
At times, their idealism becomes a barrier. They may romanticize people or situations, only to feel disillusioned when reality falls short. Their aversion to ugliness-whether in the world or within themselves-can lead to avoidance, a refusal to engage with life’s harsher aspects.
Conclusion
To grow, they must learn that true beauty includes imperfection. The thorns of the rose are not flaws but part of its nature. By integrating their shadow-acknowledging their own capacity for selfishness, confronting pain rather than retreating into aesthetic refuge-they become more grounded, more complete.
The Paul Smith Rose wearer is not merely a dreamer but a seeker. They understand that life’s richest moments are often quiet, fleeting, and deeply felt. Their challenge-and their gift-is to remain open, to love without fear, and to find the extraordinary in the ordinary.