Golden Bouquet Roccobarocco
Fragrance Story
Golden Bouquet by Roccobarocco is a Oriental Floral fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Golden Bouquet was launched in 2023. The nose behind this fragrance is Angéline Leporini. Top notes are Red Fruits, Litchi, Bergamot and Lemon; middle notes are Rose, Violet, Peony and Amber; base notes are Caramel, Musk, Cashmeran and Moss.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Angéline Leporini
Angéline Leporini is a French perfumer known for her work with major houses like Amouage and Ajmal. Her style balances fresh, citrusy accords with deeper woody and oriental notes, as seen in 4711 Acqua Colonia Yuzu & Cedarwood and Epic Woman. She also creates complex, opulent compositions such as Qasida Dahabia and the green, modern twist of 4711 Remix Green Oasis.
Fragrance Notes
Character Profile
The Roccobarocco Enthusiast Archetype: Portrait of Golden Bouquet Roccobarocco
Essence
At the heart of this individual lies the Sovereign-the ruler, the radiant center of their own world. They are not a tyrant, nor a conqueror, but rather one who commands presence effortlessly, drawing others into their orbit with an air of quiet authority. The fragrance Golden Bouquet Roccobarocco-opulent, floral, touched with warmth-mirrors their essence: a blend of elegance and magnetism. They do not demand attention; they simply receive it, as naturally as sunlight falls upon gold.
Shadow
Yet, the Sovereign’s greatest strength can also be their undoing. Their love of control can slip into rigidity, their self-assurance into arrogance. They may dismiss what they deem "common" too quickly, mistaking simplicity for shallowness. There is a loneliness in their tower-one they may not admit, even to themselves.
Their flaw is not cruelty, but distance. They fear being ordinary, and so they sometimes withhold their true self, polishing their exterior until even they forget what lies beneath. The risk is that they become a beautiful artifact-admired, but untouchable.
Conclusion
Their tastes are deliberate, never accidental. They favor textures that speak of luxury-cashmere, silk, the weight of well-crafted jewelry. Their home is a curated space, where every object carries intention: a vintage mirror, a leather-bound book, a single fresh flower in a slender vase. They do not clutter; they compose.
In philosophy, they are drawn to the idea that beauty is not frivolous but a discipline-an art of living well. They might quote Nietzsche’s "One must still have chaos in oneself to be able to give birth to a dancing star," but they interpret it not as a call to wildness, but as the necessity of inner refinement. Their chaos is controlled, their stars meticulously placed.