So Sticky Psychotic London
Fragrance Story
So Sticky by Psychotic London is a Oriental Vanilla fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. So Sticky was launched in 2023. The nose behind this fragrance is Celine Ellena. Top notes are Myrtle and Pomegranate; middle notes are Amber, Sandalwood and Tonka Bean; base notes are Vanilla and White Musk.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Celine Ellena
Celine Ellena is a French perfumer who has created fragrances for 100 Bon, E. Marinella, and Fragonard. Her portfolio includes the warm Ambre & Tonka and the floral Mon Lys for Fragonard. She often explores natural ingredients like lavender and iris, resulting in elegant and accessible scents.
Fragrance Notes
Character Profile
The Archetype Archetype: Portrait of So Sticky Psychotic London
Essence
To wear So Sticky Psychotic London is to embrace contradiction-sweetness laced with decay, warmth wrapped in dissonance. The fragrance itself is a paradox, much like the person who chooses it. They are drawn to the interplay of the familiar and the unsettling, the comforting and the grotesque. This is not a scent for the timid, nor for those who seek harmony above all else. It is a declaration, a challenge, a whispered confession.
At their core, this individual is an embodiment of the Trickster-the archetype of disruption, transformation, and irreverence. The Trickster exists to dismantle illusions, to mock pretension, and to reveal the absurdity beneath the surface of order. They are neither hero nor villain but something far more ambiguous-a force of chaos that both destroys and renews.
The Trickster does not seek stability; they seek truth, even when it is uncomfortable. They are the jester who speaks wisdom in riddles, the provocateur who forces others to question their own certainties. Their love for So Sticky Psychotic London reflects this: a scent that is at once playful and unsettling, a sensory prank that lingers in the mind long after it fades.
Philosophy & Values
They do not believe in absolute truths, only in the constant flux of experience. Life, to them, is a game-sometimes cruel, sometimes joyous, but always worth playing. They reject nihilism, for even in meaninglessness, they find humor and possibility.
Their morality is fluid, guided more by instinct than doctrine. They despise hypocrisy but are not above bending rules when it serves a greater mischief. They value authenticity, though their own authenticity may be a shifting thing-a performance that is paradoxically genuine.
Shadow
Yet the Trickster’s greatest strength is also their greatest weakness. Their refusal to settle can become a form of evasion, a way to avoid deeper commitments. They may flirt with chaos not out of wisdom, but out of fear-fear of boredom, fear of stagnation, fear of being truly known.
Their irreverence, when unchecked, can tip into cynicism. They may dismiss sincerity as naivety, mistaking detachment for enlightenment. At times, they provoke not to reveal truth, but simply to unsettle, leaving others wounded in their wake.
There is also a tendency toward self-destruction-a flirtation with excess, a testing of limits. So Sticky Psychotic London mirrors this: a fragrance that teeters between intoxicating and overwhelming. They may indulge in extremes, not out of hedonism, but out of a need to feel something beyond the mundane.
Conclusion
To love So Sticky Psychotic London is to embrace the Trickster within-to accept that one is never fully defined, never fully settled. This person is neither saint nor sinner, but a shapeshifter, a question mark, a spark in the dark.
They will never be at peace, but perhaps peace was never the point. Their purpose is to disrupt, to challenge, to remind others that life is stranger and more wondrous than it seems. And in that, they find their own kind of transcendence.