Montmartre Sixteen92
Fragrance Story
Montmartre by Sixteen92 is a Floral fragrance for women and men. Montmartre was launched in 2017. The nose behind this fragrance is Claire Baxter.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Claire Baxter
Claire Baxter is the perfumer behind several Sixteen92 fragrances, including A Thousand Times More Fair, Aeromancy, Black Sugar, Blood & Honey, Bruise Violet, Chiromancy, Death By Stereo!, and Dr. Van Helsing. Her work for the brand often explores dark, atmospheric themes with a gothic sensibility. She is known for creating complex, narrative-driven scents that evoke specific moods and places.
Fragrance Notes
Character Profile
The Montmartre Sixteen Archetype: Portrait of Montmartre Sixteen92
Essence
The person who cherishes Montmartre Sixteen92 is most closely aligned with the Mystic-a seeker of hidden truths, drawn to the liminal spaces between reality and reverie. This fragrance, with its blend of warm cobblestones, faded perfume, and late-night whispers, mirrors their soul: a place where nostalgia and longing intertwine. They are not merely a romantic but a philosopher of the intangible, someone who finds meaning in the ephemeral. The Mystic does not simply experience life; they decipher it, searching for symbols in the mundane.
Yet, like all archetypes, the Mystic has a shadow. Their pursuit of the unseen can lead them to drift too far from the tangible world, becoming lost in their own mind. They may struggle with grounding themselves, mistaking melancholy for depth, or isolation for wisdom.
Style & Aesthetic
Their aesthetic is one of deliberate ambiguity-softly worn edges, layers of texture, and a palette of dusky hues. They favor vintage blouses with delicate embroidery, well-loved leather jackets, and scarves that seem to carry the scent of old bookshops. Their home is a sanctuary of dim lighting, flickering candles, and shelves lined with poetry collections, tarot decks, and dried flowers pressed between yellowed pages.
Music is not merely sound to them but an incantation-they are drawn to artists like Nick Cave, Cocteau Twins, or Leonard Cohen, voices that speak of both ruin and redemption. Their taste in film leans toward the surreal and the melancholic: Tarkovsky’s dreamscapes, the haunting beauty of In the Mood for Love, or the gothic romanticism of Only Lovers Left Alive.
They move through life at their own rhythm, often out of sync with the world’s demands. Mornings are slow, spent with black coffee and handwritten journals. Evenings are for wandering-through city streets, graveyards, or along riverbanks, always attuned to the stories embedded in the landscape.
They are drawn to creative pursuits-writing, painting, or photography-but may struggle with completion, as their standards for "truth" in art are impossibly high. Procrastination is their nemesis, disguised as the need for the "right" moment of inspiration.
Philosophy & Values
They believe in the sacredness of small moments-the way light slants through a window in late afternoon, the weight of silence between two people who understand each other without words. Time, to them, is not linear but cyclical, and they often feel like they are living in multiple eras at once.
Their values are rooted in authenticity, but not in the way of those who loudly proclaim their truths. For them, authenticity is a quiet rebellion-a refusal to conform to the hurried, disenchanted pace of modern life. They are drawn to the idea of saudade, that untranslatable Portuguese longing for something that may never have existed.
Yet, their reverence for the past can become a trap. They may romanticize suffering, believing that pain is necessary for profundity. Their resistance to modernity can harden into disdain, making them aloof or dismissive of those who do not share their sensibilities.
Relationships
They do not have many friends, but the ones they keep are bound by unspoken understanding. Their relationships are intense, often marked by deep emotional exchanges and periods of silence. They are the confidant who listens at 3 AM, the one who remembers the exact way someone once said their name.
Romantically, they are drawn to kindred spirits-people who see the world as a place of hidden meanings. Their love is poetic, sometimes to a fault; they may idealize partners, only to be disillusioned when reality fails to match their vision. They fear mundanity more than heartbreak.
Their shadow here is a tendency toward emotional withdrawal. When overwhelmed, they retreat into solitude, leaving others to wonder if they were ever truly present at all.
Shadow
At their best, they are a beacon for those who feel unseen, a reminder that beauty exists in the overlooked. Their presence is a quiet antidote to the noise of the world.
At their worst, they become lost in their own mythology, mistaking detachment for enlightenment. They must learn that wisdom is not only found in solitude but also in the messy, imperfect act of living among others.
The Montmartre Sixteen92 wearer is neither wholly of this world nor entirely apart from it. They exist in the in-between-a dreamer in twilight, forever searching for the sublime in the cracks of the ordinary.