Smoke Of God Simone Andreoli
Fragrance Story
Smoke Of God by Simone Andreoli is a fragrance for women and men. Smoke Of God was launched in 2018. The nose behind this fragrance is Simone Andreoli. Top notes are Incense, Elemi resin and Styrax; middle notes are Amyris, Absinthe and Cashmere Wood; base notes are Incense and Leather.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Simone Andreoli
Simone Andreoli is an Italian perfumer known for creating evocative and narrative-driven fragrances. His catalog includes a wide range of scents such as Amaranthvs, Born From Fire, and Leisure In Paradise, each designed to tell a distinct story. Andreoli's work often blends rich, natural ingredients with modern compositions, appealing to those who seek both artistry and wearability in their perfumes.
Fragrance Notes
Character Profile
The Mystic Archetype: Portrait of Smoke Of God Simone Andreoli
Essence
The one who wears Smoke of God by Simone Andreoli is not merely a lover of fragrance but a seeker of the ineffable. This scent-dark, resinous, smoky, yet touched with sacred sweetness-belongs to the Mystic, an archetype rooted in Jung’s conception of the spiritual wanderer. The Mystic is drawn to the liminal, the spaces between worlds, where the material and the divine blur. They are not content with surface truths; they crave the hidden, the symbolic, the transcendent.
This person does not wear perfume; they inhabit it. The scent becomes an extension of their aura-an olfactory sigil marking their presence as one who moves through life with quiet intensity.
Philosophy & Values
Their life is not one of loud declarations but of silent, deliberate movements. They are the observer in the corner of the room, the one who listens more than they speak, yet when they do, their words carry weight. Their philosophy is not dogmatic but fluid-a blend of esoteric wisdom, existential questioning, and a touch of poetic fatalism. They believe in the unseen currents of existence, the idea that reality is layered, and that meaning must be excavated rather than handed to them.
They are drawn to art that disturbs as much as it enchants-dark surrealism, ambient music that hums with melancholy, literature that explores the shadowed corners of the human soul (Borges, Pessoa, Woolf). Their taste is refined but never ostentatious; they prefer the weight of aged leather, the texture of raw linen, the muted glow of candlelight over the harsh glare of modernity.
They value depth over breadth in relationships. Their circle is small, their trust hard-won. They do not suffer small talk gladly, but when they find a kindred spirit, their loyalty is unwavering. Romantic partners must understand their need for solitude-their love is not possessive but expansive, like incense filling a room without clinging.
Yet, their devotion to the unseen can make them seem distant, even cold. They are not unfeeling, but their emotions run subterranean, surfacing in cryptic phrases or sudden, unexpected gestures. Those who do not understand them may mistake their introspection for aloofness, their silence for indifference.
Shadow
The Mystic’s strength is also their flaw. Their obsession with the hidden can become a retreat from the tangible world. They may grow so enamored with their own inner visions that they neglect the demands of the present-responsibilities, relationships, the mundane but necessary acts of living.
At their worst, they risk becoming the Recluse, lost in their own mythologies, mistaking solitude for wisdom and detachment for enlightenment. Their pursuit of the sacred can sour into self-absorption, a refusal to engage with life’s messiness. The smoke that once symbolized transcendence may become a veil, obscuring rather than revealing.
Conclusion
Yet, when balanced, the Mystic is a rare soul-one who bridges the ephemeral and the earthly. They remind others that life is more than what is visible, that mystery is not an escape but a deepening. Their presence, like their scent, lingers long after they have left the room-an imprint of something vast, unspoken, and hauntingly beautiful.
They are not for everyone. But for those who recognize them, they are a beacon in the dark, a whisper of the divine in a world too often deafened by noise.