Beijo Que Fica Quem Disse Berenice
Fragrance Story
Beijo Que Fica by Quem Disse Berenice is a Chypre Fruity fragrance for women. Beijo Que Fica was launched in 2021. Top notes are Red Fruits, Pear, Green Notes and Bergamot; middle notes are Jasmine, Peach and Peony; base notes are Sweet Notes, Amber, Patchouli and Sandalwood.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Unknown Perfumer
Fragrance Notes
Beijo Que Fica Quem Disse Berenice by Quem Disse Berenice 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.
Beijo Que Fica Quem Disse Berenice embodies the distinctive style of Quem Disse Berenice while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Beijo Que Fica Quem Disse Berenice
Essence
Their soul is steeped in the essence of the Lover archetype-sensual, magnetic, and deeply attuned to beauty in all its forms. This is not mere romanticism, but a fundamental way of being. The fragrance Beijo Que Fica-a lingering kiss, a memory that refuses to fade-mirrors their nature: intoxicating, evocative, and impossible to ignore. They live through the senses, seeking pleasure, connection, and aesthetic harmony. Yet, like all archetypes, the Lover has its shadow-a tendency toward indulgence, possessiveness, or an inability to endure the mundane.
Style & Aesthetic
Their tastes are refined but never sterile. They prefer the richness of dark red wines, the texture of aged leather, and the warmth of amber-lit rooms. Music is not just sound but sensation-perhaps the sultry melancholy of bossa nova or the raw passion of flamenco. Their home is a sanctuary of curated beauty: velvet drapes, antique mirrors, and the faint scent of something floral yet mysterious lingering in the air.
Philosophy, for them, is not abstract but lived. They believe in the sacredness of touch, the poetry of a glance, the way a moment can be stretched into eternity through memory. They are drawn to thinkers like Nietzsche (not in his hammer-wielding mode, but in his celebration of life’s Dionysian pulse) and Anaïs Nin, who wrote of love as both wound and ecstasy.
They reject the utilitarian. Work must have meaning, not just function. They might be an artist, a perfumer, a curator-or if trapped in a conventional job, they will adorn it with personal flourishes: a silk scarf, a vintage fountain pen, a playlist that transforms the office into a temporary stage.
Their greatest fear? A life devoid of rapture. They would rather suffer deeply than live shallowly. This can make them impatient with routine, dismissive of those who prioritize security over experience. They are not reckless, but they are drawn to thresholds-the edge of the ocean at midnight, the first sip of a stranger’s drink, the moment before a confession is spoken.
Relationships
They do not love lightly. Their relationships are deep, consuming, and often theatrical. They are the kind of person who writes letters by hand, who remembers anniversaries not out of obligation but because dates are sacred to them. Their lovers are drawn to their charisma, their ability to make even the simplest gesture feel like a ritual.
Yet here lies the shadow: attachment can turn to obsession. The same passion that makes them enchanting can become suffocating. They may struggle with jealousy or the fear of abandonment, interpreting indifference as betrayal. When wounded, they retreat into melancholy, replaying past intimacies like a film they cannot stop watching.
Shadow
The Lover’s brilliance comes at a cost. When unbalanced, they may:
- Lose themselves in fantasy, preferring the idea of love over its reality.
- Manipulate through charm, using their allure to control rather than connect.
- Grow cynical if too often disappointed, hardening into a parody of their own warmth.
Yet even their flaws are born from an excess of what makes them remarkable. Their hunger for beauty is both their salvation and their peril.
Conclusion
Beijo Que Fica is more than a scent-it is a manifesto. To wear it is to declare: I will not go gently into the ordinary. They are the ones who kiss like it’s the last time, who remember the exact shade of twilight on a lover’s skin. They are fully alive, for better or worse. And the world is richer for it.