Modern Love Smell Bent

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2010s
Moderate
Sillage
Good
Longevity
Fall, Winter
Best Season
Evening, Special Occasion
Best For

Fragrance Story

Modern Love by Smell Bent is a Oriental fragrance for women and men. The nose behind this fragrance is Brent Leonesio.

Composition Profile

floral 100%
animalic 85%
musky 70%

About the Perfumer

Brent Leonesio

Brent Leonesio

Brent Leonesio has created fragrances for both Scent Trunk and Smell Bent, with a portfolio that includes Fae, 2010, Artist's Studio, Blimey, Limey!, Bohemian Rhapsody, Bollywood Or Bust, Bolshevixen, and Brussels Sprouted. His style is playful and eclectic, often drawing from pop culture and whimsical themes. Leonesio's scents are recognized for their creativity and accessibility.

Fragrance Notes

All Notes

Complete scent profile

Floral Notes Floral Notes
Animal notes Animal notes

Character Profile

The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Modern Love Smell Bent

Essence

The person who adores Modern Love by Smell Bent is most closely aligned with The Lover archetype-a sensualist, a seeker of beauty, and a devotee of deep emotional and aesthetic experiences. This fragrance, with its blend of violet, leather, and musk, evokes a paradox: tender yet bold, nostalgic yet forward-thinking. The wearer is drawn to the tension between romance and modernity, between vulnerability and self-possession.

The Lover archetype thrives on connection-not just to people, but to art, sensation, and the ephemeral moments that make life vivid. Yet, like all archetypes, The Lover has a shadow: indulgence, dependency, or an inability to reconcile desire with discipline.

To wear Modern Love is to embrace contradiction: the softness of violet against the sharpness of leather, the past and present in dialogue. The wearer is neither purely nostalgic nor ruthlessly forward-thinking-they exist in the tension between.

They are a romantic in a world that often dismisses romance as frivolous. Yet their love is not naive; it is a choice, a rebellion against detachment. They remind us that to feel deeply is not weakness, but a kind of courage.

And if they sometimes falter-if they retreat into fantasy or grow weary of the world’s indifference-they always return, because to live without love, without beauty, would be a far greater failure.

Style & Aesthetic

Their aesthetic is a carefully curated collision of eras-vintage silhouettes with contemporary minimalism, a silk blouse paired with structured trousers, or a leather jacket softened by a delicate floral scarf. They appreciate textures that tell a story: the roughness of raw denim, the smoothness of polished wood, the weight of an heirloom ring.

Their home is an extension of this sensibility-warm but not cluttered, filled with objects that hold meaning rather than mere decoration. A well-worn book of poetry sits beside a sleek modern lamp; a record player spins both Billie Holiday and experimental electronic music. They reject trends that lack depth but embrace innovation when it resonates with their inner world.

They move through the world with deliberate grace, savoring rituals: the slow unfurling of a morning routine, the deliberate selection of a fragrance that matches their mood. They are drawn to cities-places where art, culture, and human energy collide-but they also need solitude, retreats where they can recalibrate.

Work must have meaning; they resist drudgery. They may be drawn to creative fields-writing, design, curation-or they may infuse more conventional roles with their signature thoughtfulness. Yet their aversion to monotony can make them restless, prone to abandoning projects when the initial spark fades.

Philosophy & Values

For them, life is an act of sensual philosophy. They believe in the transformative power of beauty-not as escapism, but as a way of engaging more deeply with reality. A perfectly brewed cup of tea, the golden light of late afternoon, the scent of rain on pavement-these are not trivialities but essential truths.

They value authenticity above all, despising pretense or hollow gestures. Yet this can manifest as impatience with those who don’t share their intensity, a quiet disdain for the mundane. Their idealism is both their strength and their blind spot.

Relationships

In love, they are both passionate and discerning. They crave connection that is electric-conversations that last until dawn, touches charged with unspoken meaning. Yet they are not reckless; they withdraw from relationships that feel shallow or obligatory.

Their shadow emerges when desire becomes fixation-when the thrill of pursuit eclipses the reality of the person they desire. They may romanticize partners, only to feel disillusioned when human flaws surface. Their challenge is to love without idealizing, to embrace imperfection without losing their sense of wonder.

Shadow

The Lover’s greatest weakness is the temptation to lose themselves in sensation. They may chase intensity to the point of exhaustion, mistaking drama for depth. Their pursuit of beauty can become a form of escapism, a refusal to engage with life’s harsher truths.

At their worst, they may grow cynical, dismissing what they cannot idealize. Or they may become indulgent, prioritizing pleasure over responsibility. Their challenge is to integrate their idealism with wisdom-to love fiercely but not blindly.