Infamous Poesie
Fragrance Story
Infamous by Poesie is a fragrance for women. Infamous was launched in 2019. The nose behind this fragrance is Joelle Nealy.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Joelle Nealy
Joelle Nealy is a perfumer known for her extensive work with Poesie, creating fragrances such as A Thousand Warriors, All Jollity, and Aurora. Her portfolio includes a variety of themes from cozy to ethereal, as seen in Balmoral Fireplace and Arctic Monkeys. Nealy's compositions often blend storytelling with nuanced scent profiles.
Fragrance Notes
Infamous Poesie by Poesie 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.
Infamous Poesie embodies the distinctive style of Poesie while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Archetype Archetype: Portrait of Infamous Poesie
Essence
At the core of this individual lies the Trickster archetype-not in its mischievous, chaotic form, but as the Enigma, the one who defies easy categorization. They are neither wholly light nor shadow, but a shifting interplay of both. Infamous, with its darkly poetic blend of opium, black coffee, and vanilla, mirrors their essence: intoxicating yet grounded, alluring yet elusive. They do not seek to be understood, only to be experienced-like a scent that lingers long after its wearer has departed.
Style & Aesthetic
Their aesthetic is deliberately ambiguous. They favor textures that suggest history-worn leather, faded velvet, the patina of old brass. Their wardrobe balances elegance with an edge: a tailored coat with a slightly undone collar, a vintage dress paired with combat boots. They collect oddities-antique perfume bottles, handwritten letters from strangers, dried flowers pressed between the pages of forbidden books.
In art, they are drawn to the symbolists and surrealists, where meaning is fluid and dreams bleed into reality. They prefer music that evokes rather than declares-dark jazz, neoclassical piano, the murmur of spoken word. Their taste in literature leans toward the Gothic and the philosophical, where beauty and terror intertwine.
They thrive in liminal spaces-dimly lit cafés at midnight, abandoned theaters, train stations at dawn. Their home is a curated chaos: shelves overflowing with books, candles burned down to stubs, a record player spinning vinyls from another era. They write in journals they never finish, start projects they abandon, and leave traces of themselves everywhere without ever fully settling.
Their greatest strength is their ability to see beyond the surface, to find magic in the mundane. But their greatest flaw is their resistance to being seen in return. They fear that if they are ever fully known, the spell will break.
Philosophy & Values
They reject absolutes, seeing life as a series of contradictions to be embraced rather than resolved. Truth, to them, is not a fixed point but a spectrum of perceptions. They are drawn to paradoxes-beauty in decay, wisdom in folly, warmth in darkness. Their philosophy is one of aesthetic depth: they believe meaning is found not in rigid morality, but in the richness of experience.
Yet this very fluidity can become their shadow. Their refusal to commit to a single truth may render them untrustworthy in the eyes of others. They flirt with ideas, people, and identities, never fully belonging to any. Their love of mystery can become evasion, their charm a shield against vulnerability.
Relationships
They are magnetic but distant, drawing others in with their wit and presence, yet always keeping a part of themselves hidden. Their relationships are intense but ephemeral-like a fragrance that blooms brilliantly before fading. They inspire fascination, even obsession, but few truly know them.
Their shadow emerges in their fear of permanence. They may sabotage intimacy, retreating into enigma when connection becomes too real. They are capable of deep love, but it is often expressed in riddles rather than declarations.
Conclusion
They are a living contradiction-both the poison and the antidote. Infamous is their perfect scent because it, too, refuses to be simple. It is sweet yet bitter, warm yet dangerous, familiar yet strange. Like the fragrance, they are an experience, not an explanation. And perhaps that is enough.