Volare Profumi Di Polignano

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2018
Moderate
Sillage
Moderate
Longevity
Spring, Summer
Best Season
Casual
Best For

Fragrance Story

Volare by Profumi Di Polignano is a fragrance for women and men. Volare was launched in 2018. The nose behind this fragrance is Arturetto Landi. Top notes are Coriander, Seaweed and Saffron; middle notes are Rose, Geranium and Ylang-Ylang; base notes are Black Pepper, Pink Pepper and White Musk.

Composition Profile

aromatic 100%
rose 85%
fresh spicy 70%
soft spicy 60%
herbal 50%
yellow floral 40%
sweet 35%
warm spicy 30%
marine 25%

About the Perfumer

Arturetto Landi

Arturetto Landi

Arturetto Landi is an Italian perfumer known for his work with brands like Adjiumi and Al-Jazeera Perfumes. His style balances classic structure with bold contrasts, often blending rich resins with unexpected floral or gourmand notes. Notable creations include the complex 1918 Parfum National series and the intense, darkly sweet Adjiumi Incubo.

Fragrance Notes

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Coriander Coriander
Seaweed Seaweed
Saffron Saffron

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Rose Rose
Geranium Geranium
Ylang-Ylang Ylang-Ylang

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Black Pepper Black Pepper
Pink Pepper Pink Pepper
White Musk White Musk

Character Profile

The Explorer Archetype: Portrait of Volare Profumi Di Polignano

Essence

To wear Volare Profumi Di Polignano is to embody the scent of sunlit cliffs, salt-kissed air, and the restless whisper of the Mediterranean. This fragrance-bright, citrusy, yet anchored in woody warmth-belongs to a soul who thrives on movement, discovery, and the intoxicating thrill of the unknown. Their archetype is the Explorer, the eternal seeker who values freedom above all else, driven by curiosity and an insatiable hunger for experience.

Shadow

Yet, for all their brilliance, the Explorer has a shadow-one that whispers of rootlessness, of a fear so deep it masquerades as courage. Their ceaseless motion can become an evasion, a way to outrun the stillness where self-doubt might catch up.

The Fear of Commitment: They may mistake depth for confinement, seeing relationships as chains rather than anchors. Their independence, while admirable, can harden into isolation, leaving behind a trail of half-finished connections.

The Illusion of Freedom: Sometimes, their wandering is not liberation but escape. They may mistake novelty for growth, accumulating experiences without ever integrating them. The world becomes a buffet they sample but never truly savor.

The Hidden Loneliness: Beneath the glamour of their adventures, there are moments-rare, but piercing-when they wonder if they are running toward something or away from everything. The horizon, always receding, can become a taunt rather than a promise.

Conclusion

This person is animated by the belief that life is not meant to be lived within narrow borders. Their philosophy is one of expansion-geographically, intellectually, emotionally. They are drawn to the edges of maps, both literal and metaphorical, where the familiar dissolves into possibility.

Tastes & Style: Their aesthetic is effortless yet intentional-linen shirts that breathe in the heat, leather-bound journals filled with sketches of foreign streets, a wrist adorned with a single piece of jewelry from a market in Marrakech. They prefer raw, unfiltered beauty over polished perfection: a sun-faded fresco over a sterile gallery, a handwritten letter over a text.

Values & Philosophy: They reject stagnation as a kind of slow death. Routine is their enemy; spontaneity, their ally. They believe in the wisdom of the road, the lessons found in chance encounters, and the idea that one’s true self is not fixed but forged through movement.

Relationships: They attract others with their magnetic energy, but intimacy is a paradox for them. They love deeply, but fleetingly-like a storm that sweeps in, electrifies the air, then moves on. Their closest bonds are with fellow wanderers, those who understand that love does not always mean permanence.

Lifestyle: Their home, if they have one, is a curated museum of their travels-a seashell from Santorini, a tattered novel left behind in a Lisbon café, a bottle of wine from a vineyard in Tuscany. They work to live, not the other way around, often in careers that allow fluidity-photography, writing, consulting, or entrepreneurial ventures that thrive on adaptability.