Island Water Woman Scotch & Soda

For Women
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2020
Moderate
Sillage
Good
Longevity
Summer
Best Season
Casual
Best For

Fragrance Story

Island Water Woman by Scotch & Soda is a Floral Fruity Gourmand fragrance for women. Island Water Woman was launched in 2020. Island Water Woman was created by Philippine Courtière and Amandine Clerc-Marie. Top notes are Angelica and Black Currant; middle notes are Jasmine, Stephanotis, Cannonball Flower and Coconut; base notes are Salt, Exotic Woods and Patchouli.

Composition Profile

white floral 100%
woody 85%
musky 70%
floral 60%
fruity 50%
amber 40%
salty 35%
powdery 30%
coconut 25%

About the Perfumer

Amandine Clerc-Marie

Amandine Clerc-Marie

Amandine Clerc-Marie is a French perfumer who trained at Givaudan and now works as a senior perfumer at Symrise. Her style often balances fresh, transparent accords with soft floral or citrus notes, creating versatile and wearable compositions. She is known for developing Angel Schlesser Pour Elle and its flankers, as well as the fruity-floral Scent Of Kiss My Heart for Armand Basi.

Fragrance Notes

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Angelica Angelica
Black Currant Black Currant

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Jasmine Jasmine
Stephanotis Stephanotis
Cannonball Flower Cannonball Flower
Coconut Coconut

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Salt Salt
Exotic Woods Exotic Woods
Patchouli Patchouli
Unique Character

Island Water Woman Scotch & Soda by Scotch & Soda offers a distinctive olfactory experience that stands out from other fragrances in its category.

Artisanal Creation

Crafted with the finest ingredients and a blend of traditional and modern perfumery techniques, this fragrance represents the pinnacle of the perfumer's art.

Signature Style

Island Water Woman Scotch & Soda embodies the distinctive style of Scotch & Soda while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.

Character Profile

The Island Water Woman Archetype: Portrait of Island Water Woman Scotch & Soda

Essence

The one who wears Island Water Woman by Scotch & Soda is most closely aligned with the Explorer-a restless soul driven by curiosity, independence, and a deep yearning for the unknown. This archetype thrives on movement, discovery, and the intoxicating thrill of new experiences. Like the fragrance itself-fresh, aquatic, yet subtly complex-this person embodies a duality: a surface-level lightness with an undercurrent of depth.

The Explorer does not merely travel; they seek transformation. They are not content with stagnation, whether in geography, thought, or emotion. Their life is an ongoing quest, not for material conquest, but for the expansion of their own horizons.

Style & Aesthetic

Their style is effortless yet deliberate-a mix of bohemian ease and minimalist precision. Flowing linen, unstructured silhouettes, and muted earth tones dominate their wardrobe, occasionally punctuated by a bold, unexpected detail-a handcrafted necklace, a scarf from a distant market. They favor natural textures, unpolished beauty, and objects that tell a story.

In music, they gravitate toward ambient soundscapes, world folk, or jazz-anything that evokes open spaces and uncharted emotions. Their reading list is eclectic: travelogues, philosophy, and poetry that speaks of impermanence. They are drawn to flavors that surprise-spicy, citrusy, or herbal-never predictable, never bland.

They thrive in environments that mirror their fluidity-coastal towns, mountain retreats, bustling cities with hidden pockets of solitude. Their home, if they have one, is a curated sanctuary of travel mementos, books, and natural light. They work in fields that allow movement-freelance writing, photography, consulting-or they structure their career around sabbaticals and remote possibilities.

Routine is their enemy, but this can be their downfall. Without structure, their freedom becomes chaos. They may struggle with commitment-not just to people, but to projects, goals, even their own potential.

Philosophy & Values

Freedom is their highest ideal, but not in the reckless sense. Their freedom is a disciplined one-a refusal to be bound by convention, yet not without purpose. They believe in the fluidity of identity, the impermanence of place, and the necessity of reinvention.

They value authenticity above all, despising pretense or forced conformity. Their relationships are built on mutual growth; they have little patience for those who cling to stagnation. Yet, their idealism can border on impatience-they struggle with those who do not share their hunger for change.

Relationships

Their connections are deep but transient-not out of coldness, but because their nature resists permanence. They love fiercely but often from a distance, maintaining friendships across continents through sporadic but meaningful exchanges. Romantic partners must understand their need for space; those who try to chain them will only push them away.

They are drawn to fellow wanderers, artists, and thinkers-those who understand that love does not always mean possession. Their shadow emerges here: a fear of true intimacy, a tendency to flee when things become too settled. They mistake restlessness for growth, sometimes abandoning what could have been profound for the sake of novelty.

Shadow

The Explorer’s greatest weakness is their inability to stay. They mistake motion for progress, believing that if they keep moving, they will never have to confront their own depths. Their avoidance of permanence can become a prison-always running, never arriving.

They may romanticize solitude to the point of isolation, dismissing deeper connections as burdens. Their independence, while admirable, can harden into detachment. The challenge for them is to learn that true freedom is not just the absence of ties, but the ability to choose them wisely.

Conclusion

The one who wears Island Water Woman is not merely a traveler-they are a philosopher of motion. Their life is an experiment in living lightly, yet meaningfully. They understand that the journey is the destination, but they must also learn that some roots do not trap-they nourish.

In their best moments, they are a force of inspiration, reminding others that life is vast and fluid. In their worst, they are a ghost-always present, never staying. But perhaps that is the paradox of their essence: to be forever drawn to the horizon, yet always carrying it within.