Jungle Jezebel Sarah Baker Perfumes
Fragrance Story
Jungle Jezebel by Sarah Baker Perfumes is a Oriental Floral fragrance for women and men. Jungle Jezebel was launched in 2018. The nose behind this fragrance is Miguel Matos. Top notes are Bubble Gum, Banana, Grapes, Peach and Sweet Orange; middle notes are Tuberose, Ylang-Ylang, Amber, Sandalwood and Rose; base notes are Civet, Vanilla, Tonka Bean and Vetiver.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Miguel Matos
Miguel Matos is a prolific perfumer with creations for A13, Astrophil & Stella, Azman, and Bruno Acampora, including Out In The Open, Sweet Pulp, Killer Vavoom, and multiple Citrea Prochyta and Freak Chic editions. His work often explores bold, avant-garde themes with rich and intense compositions. He is known for pushing boundaries in contemporary perfumery.
Fragrance Notes
Jungle Jezebel Sarah Baker Perfumes by Sarah Baker Perfumes 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.
Jungle Jezebel Sarah Baker Perfumes embodies the distinctive style of Sarah Baker Perfumes while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Wild Woman Archetype: Portrait of Jungle Jezebel Sarah Baker Perfumes
Essence
To wear Jungle Jezebel by Sarah Baker Perfumes is to embody the untamed-a fragrance that pulses with lush greenery, ripe fruit, and the musk of hidden pathways. The person who chooses this scent does not merely dabble in the wild; they are the wild, a living manifestation of the Wild Woman archetype. She is both creator and destroyer, a force of nature who refuses to be domesticated.
The Wild Woman is not a myth but a truth-an instinctual, primal force that thrives beyond the borders of polite society. She is the one who walks barefoot through the undergrowth, who laughs too loudly, who seduces and abandons without regret. Her philosophy is simple: life is too vast to be lived in half-measures. She does not seek permission; she takes what she desires.
Her tastes are as bold as her scent-opulent fabrics, deep reds, gold jewelry that catches the light like fire. She surrounds herself with the textures of nature: raw silk, animal prints, the rough bark of driftwood sculptures. In art, she favors the surreal and the sensual-Leonora Carrington’s dreamscapes, Frida Kahlo’s unflinching self-portraits. She listens to music that thrums with life: Nina Simone’s defiance, the primal beats of tribal drums, the dark allure of trip-hop.
Shadow
Yet every archetype has its shadow. The Wild Woman’s refusal to be tamed can curdle into chaos. Her independence, when unchecked, becomes isolation. She may leave lovers wounded in her wake, dismissing their pain as weakness. Her disdain for convention can harden into contempt for those who live within its bounds, forgetting that not everyone is built for the jungle.
There is a danger, too, in her relentless hunger for intensity. Without balance, she risks burning out-chasing sensation until nothing satisfies. The same ferocity that makes her radiant can make her cruel, mistaking brutality for strength. She must learn that true wildness is not the absence of restraint but the mastery of it.
Conclusion
Her greatest strength is her refusal to be caged. She moves through the world with an unshakable confidence, unafraid of judgment or consequence. Relationships are intense but fleeting; she loves deeply but does not linger where the air grows stale. She is drawn to those who match her fire-lovers who challenge her, friends who dare to be as unapologetic as she is.
Her values are rooted in authenticity. She despises hypocrisy, pretense, and the suffocating weight of societal expectations. If she must choose between comfort and truth, she will always choose truth. Her lifestyle is one of movement-travel, spontaneity, nights that bleed into dawn. She is not reckless, but she is relentless in her pursuit of experience.