Tipakorn Siam 1928
Fragrance Story
Tipakorn by SIAM 1928 is a fragrance for women and men. Tipakorn was launched in 2020. The nose behind this fragrance is Nutt Wesshasartar. Top notes are Borneol, Yuzu, Strobilanthes Callosus and Bergamot; middle notes are Tobacco, Matcha Tea and Smoke; base notes are Vetiver, Agarwood (Oud) and Patchouli.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Nutt Wesshasartar
Nutt Wesshasartar is a Thai perfumer known for his work with Azman and SIAM 1928, creating fragrances like I Am Darkness Azman and Aerapata Siam 1928. His compositions often draw on Thai cultural and natural elements, blending dark, mysterious notes with fresh, aromatic accords. He has contributed to the growth of Southeast Asian niche perfumery with a focus on storytelling and local ingredients.
Fragrance Notes
Tipakorn Siam 1928 by SIAM 1928 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.
Tipakorn Siam 1928 embodies the distinctive style of SIAM 1928 while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Sage Archetype: Portrait of Tipakorn Siam 1928
Essence
To wear Tipakorn Siam 1928 is to carry the weight of history and the whisper of forgotten wisdom. This fragrance-deep, resinous, and layered with smoky oud, aged woods, and the faintest hint of spice-is not for the casual or the fleeting. It is chosen by those who seek meaning beyond the surface, who value tradition yet refuse to be bound by it. The wearer is not merely a person but a living paradox: a guardian of the past and a quiet revolutionary of the present.
The dominant archetype here is the Sage, the seeker of truth, the keeper of knowledge. Like Jung’s archetype of the Wise Old Man (or Woman), this person is drawn to understanding, to the hidden patterns beneath life’s chaos. They are not content with easy answers; they crave depth, nuance, and the slow unraveling of mysteries. The Sage does not merely observe-they interpret, they question, they refine.
Yet the Sage’s shadow is the Dogmatist, the one who, in their pursuit of wisdom, may become rigid, overly critical, or lost in abstraction. The wearer of Tipakorn Siam 1928 must navigate this tension-between enlightenment and arrogance, between knowing and truly understanding.
Style & Aesthetic
Their wardrobe is a reflection of their mind-structured yet organic, elegant without being showy. They favor natural fabrics, muted tones, and pieces that tell a story: a well-tailored blazer, a vintage watch, a scarf passed down through generations. Their style is not about fashion but about essence-what endures.
They are drawn to art that demands interpretation: classical music with intricate harmonies, literature dense with symbolism, films that leave room for the unsaid. They do not consume culture; they engage with it, often returning to the same works again and again, finding new layers each time.
Philosophy & Values
This person moves through the world with deliberate grace, their presence neither loud nor meek, but assured. They are drawn to the timeless-antique books, well-worn leather, the quiet hum of a library at dusk. Their tastes are refined but never ostentatious; they prefer the patina of age over the gleam of the new.
Their philosophy is one of measured depth. They believe in the value of silence, in the power of restraint. They do not speak to fill the air but to shape it. Their words are chosen carefully, their opinions formed only after long contemplation. They distrust trends, seeing them as distractions from enduring truths.
Yet this reverence for the past can sometimes make them resistant to change. They may dismiss modern ideas too quickly, mistaking novelty for shallowness. Their love of wisdom can, at times, harden into intellectual pride.
Relationships
They are not the life of the party, nor do they wish to be. Their friendships are few but profound, built on mutual respect and shared intellectual curiosity. They attract those who appreciate depth, who are willing to engage in long conversations about philosophy, history, or the subtle shifts of human nature.
Romantically, they seek a partner who is both their equal and their counterbalance-someone who can challenge their ideas without dismissing them. They are slow to trust but fiercely loyal once they do. Their love is not loud or impulsive but steady, a quiet fire that burns long after others have flared out.
Yet their introspective nature can make them emotionally reserved. They may struggle with vulnerability, retreating into thought when faced with raw feeling. Their pursuit of wisdom can, at times, distance them from the messy, imperfect beauty of lived experience.
Shadow
The Sage’s greatest danger is detachment. In their quest for understanding, they may forget to live. They can become so absorbed in ideas that they neglect the present moment, the warmth of a touch, the joy of spontaneity. Their critical mind, so sharp in dissecting truth, can turn inward, leading to self-doubt or even cynicism.
They must learn that wisdom is not only found in books or ancient traditions but in the unguarded laughter of a friend, the imperfect beauty of a fleeting moment. The scent of Tipakorn Siam 1928 lingers-not because it shouts, but because it endures. So too must they balance depth with presence, knowledge with life.
Conclusion
To wear Tipakorn Siam 1928 is to carry a quiet authority, a knowing that does not need to announce itself. This person is neither conqueror nor recluse, but something rarer: a thinker who walks the line between past and present, between wisdom and warmth.
They are the Sage, yes-but the truest Sages know that wisdom is not merely knowing, but living. And so they must step, now and then, out of the library and into the world, letting the scent of aged wood and distant spice remind them that even the deepest truths must, in the end, be breathed in, not just studied.