Case Study #23 Amber Sanguine Rbow
Fragrance Story
Case Study #23 Amber Sanguine by RboW is a Floral fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Case Study #23 Amber Sanguine was launched in 2023. The nose behind this fragrance is Mathieu Nardin. Top notes are Blackcurrant, Pink Pepper and Bergamot; middle notes are Lily of the Valley, Violet and Iris; base notes are Chocolate, Ambrarome, Orcanox™, Cashmeran and Moss.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Mathieu Nardin
Mathieu Nardin is a versatile perfumer with creations for 100 Bon, 4711, and Al-Jazeera Perfumes. His scents include Elemi & Ambre, Matcha & Frangipani, and Jade. He has also worked on Acqua Reale and Agarthi fragrances, showcasing a broad range of styles.
Fragrance Notes
Character Profile
The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Case Study #23 Amber Sanguine Rbow
Essence
The person who adores Case Study #23 Amber Sanguine Rbow is most closely defined by The Lover archetype-a figure of passion, aesthetic devotion, and deep emotional resonance. The Lover does not merely experience life but savors it, seeking beauty in all forms, from the tactile to the ephemeral. Amber Sanguine, with its rich, resinous warmth and sanguine (blood-like) vitality, mirrors their essence: a being who thrives on intensity, connection, and the poetry of the senses.
Yet, The Lover is not without shadows. Their pursuit of beauty can tip into indulgence; their emotional depth may become possessive or melancholic. They walk the line between ecstasy and excess, between devotion and dependency.
Style & Aesthetic
Their aesthetic is one of timeless seduction-think deep burgundies, black silk, gold accents. They favor fabrics that whisper when they move, jewelry with history (a signet ring, an heirloom locket). There is something faintly baroque about them, as if they belong to another century. Even in simplicity, there is intention: a single drop of perfume on the wrist, a well-placed scar.
Yet, this elegance carries a shadow-a subtle memento mori. They know beauty is fleeting, and this knowledge lends their style a bittersweet gravity.
Philosophy & Values
This person lives as if the world were a grand opera-every moment an aria, every encounter a duet. Their philosophy is one of radical presence, believing that life’s meaning is found in the textures of experience: the warmth of skin, the flicker of candlelight, the slow burn of a well-aged whiskey. They reject the cold utilitarianism of modern life, favoring instead the romanticism of the old world-where love was tragic, art was sacred, and pleasure was a form of wisdom.
They are drawn to decadence with restraint-antique velvet, dark wine, handwritten letters. Their home is a sanctuary of curated beauty: Persian rugs, incense coils, shelves lined with poetry and philosophy. They do not merely read Rilke; they feel him in their bones.
Relationships
For them, love is not a transaction but a sacrament. They do not love lightly; when they give their heart, it is with the solemnity of an oath. Their relationships are deep, often tempestuous, because they demand the same intensity they offer. They are the kind of lover who writes letters in the middle of the night, who memorizes the cadence of their partner’s breath.
But here lies the danger: their passion can suffocate. The Lover’s shadow is jealousy, the fear of losing what they cherish most. They may cling too tightly, mistake possession for devotion. Their challenge is to love without consuming, to adore without demanding.
Shadow
Every archetype has its dark reflection. For The Lover, it is hedonism veering into self-destruction. They may lose themselves in pleasure, mistaking sensation for meaning. Their melancholic streak can deepen into morbid fixation, where every goodbye feels like a funeral.
At their worst, they become the tragic romantic-the one who drinks too much, loves too hard, and burns too bright. But at their best, they are the alchemist of emotion, turning raw experience into gold.
Conclusion
The devotee of Amber Sanguine is neither saint nor sinner, but a soul who refuses to live halfway. They embrace the messiness of desire, the weight of memory, the ache of beauty. Their flaw is their grandeur; their strength is their depth.
They are, in the end, a reminder: to love fiercely is to risk ruin, but to love not at all is to never truly live.