Rose 802 Providence Perfume Co.
Fragrance Story
Rose 802 by Providence Perfume Co. is a Floral fragrance for women and men. Rose 802 was launched in 2014. The nose behind this fragrance is Charna Ethier.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Charna Ethier
Charna Ethier is a perfumer and founder of Providence Perfume Co., where she has created numerous fragrances. Her portfolio includes Basil & Bartlett, Bay Rum Cologne, Branch & Vine, Cocoa Tuberose, Divine Noir, Divine, Drunk On The Moon, and Eva Luna. She is known for using natural ingredients to craft complex, artisanal scents.
Fragrance Notes
Rose 802 Providence Perfume Co. by Providence Perfume Co. 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.
Rose 802 Providence Perfume Co. embodies the distinctive style of Providence Perfume Co. while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Rose 802 Providence Perfume Co.
Essence
To wear Rose 802 by Providence Perfume Co. is to embrace the paradox of delicacy and depth. This fragrance-a blend of Bulgarian rose, frankincense, and sandalwood-is not merely a scent but a declaration. It speaks of someone who values beauty, sensuality, and the sacred in the everyday. They are, at their core, an embodiment of the Lover archetype, one who seeks connection, meaning, and aesthetic harmony in all things.
This person does not merely exist; they experience. Life is not a series of tasks but a tapestry of sensations, emotions, and relationships. They are drawn to what is lush, evocative, and emotionally resonant. Their philosophy is not one of rigid logic but of intuitive truth-they trust what moves them, whether it be art, a lover’s touch, or the quiet melancholy of a fading sunset.
Style & Aesthetic
Their tastes are refined but never sterile. They prefer the patina of time-vintage silk, well-worn books, aged wine-over the harsh gleam of the new. Their home is a sanctuary of textures: velvet drapes, Persian rugs, dried roses in glass jars. They may collect antique perfume bottles or handwritten letters, relics of a time when sentiment was not yet digitized.
In art, they are drawn to the Pre-Raphaelites for their romanticism, to Klimt for his gold-drenched sensuality, to Rumi for his ecstatic verses. Music is not background noise but an emotional compass-Chopin’s nocturnes, Nina Simone’s smoky vibrato, or the haunting melodies of Dead Can Dance. They do not consume culture passively; they let it seep into their bones.
Their days are rituals. Morning tea in a porcelain cup, the slow application of perfume, an evening walk just to feel the air on their skin. They may practice yoga not for fitness but for the way it makes them feel-alive, fluid, connected. They are drawn to spirituality, though not dogma; incense and meditation appeal more than rigid doctrine.
Yet their pursuit of beauty can tip into indulgence. They may struggle with discipline, mistaking aesthetic pleasure for purpose. Their shadow is the hedonist who lingers too long in the bath of sensation, avoiding the mundane responsibilities that anchor them to reality.
Philosophy & Values
For them, love is not merely an emotion but a force of nature. They believe in the transformative power of intimacy-not just romantic, but the deep bonds of friendship, the silent understanding between kindred spirits. They reject transactional relationships; to them, connection must be soulful or it is nothing at all.
Yet this idealism carries weight. They are prone to disillusionment when others fail to meet their intensity. Their shadow whispers that love is fleeting, that beauty fades, that devotion is often one-sided. They may oscillate between boundless affection and guarded withdrawal, fearing that their depth will be met with shallow waters.
Relationships
In love, they are both radiant and demanding. They do not settle for half-hearted affection; they crave a partner who can match their emotional richness. When they love, it is with a fierceness that can be overwhelming-poems left on pillows, midnight conversations that unravel the soul, a gaze that feels like being known for the first time.
But their shadow lurks in possessiveness, in the fear of abandonment. They may mistake intensity for permanence, confusing passion with durability. When betrayed, they do not simply grieve-they unravel. Their greatest fear is not loneliness but the realization that their love was never truly seen.
Conclusion
They are both fragile and resilient, open-hearted yet wary. Their strength lies in their capacity to feel deeply, to find meaning where others see only routine. But their weakness is the same-their heart is a compass that does not always point north.
To know them is to know both the rose and the thorn. They will intoxicate you with their presence, but they may also wound you-and themselves-with their expectations. Yet even in their flaws, there is beauty. For what is a rose without its scent, its petals, its fleeting, glorious bloom?