Foxcroft Solstice Scents

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: Unknown
Moderate
Sillage
Good
Longevity
Fall
Best Season
Casual
Best For

Fragrance Story

Foxcroft by Solstice Scents is a fragrance for women and men. The nose behind this fragrance is Angela St.John.

Composition Profile

woody 100%
earthy 85%
smoky 70%

About the Perfumer

Angela St.John

Angela St.John

Angela St. John is the founder and creative force behind Solstice Scents, an independent perfume house known for its atmospheric and narrative-driven compositions. Her style blends natural and synthetic materials to evoke specific places, seasons, and moods, often with a dark, nostalgic, or gourmand bent. Notable creations from her catalog include the petrichor-laced After The Rain, the rich amber of Amber Coeur, and the woodland depth of Black Forest, each showcasing her talent for immersive storytelling through scent.

Fragrance Notes

All Notes

Complete scent profile

Woodsy Notes Woodsy Notes
Smoke Smoke
Soil Tincture Soil Tincture
Dried Fallen Leaves Dried Fallen Leaves

Character Profile

The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Foxcroft Solstice Scents

Essence

Foxcroft by Solstice Scents is a fragrance of contradictions-earthy and ethereal, warm yet crisp, evoking the scent of autumn leaves, damp soil, and distant woodsmoke. It is not a perfume for those who seek simplicity or obvious allure; it is for those who find beauty in decay, romance in melancholy, and depth in the fleeting. The person who wears Foxcroft is drawn to the liminal, the spaces between seasons, between day and night, between memory and presence.

Style & Aesthetic

Their tastes are deliberate, layered, and often nostalgic. They prefer old books with yellowed pages, vinyl records that crackle with age, and clothing that carries the weight of history-perhaps a well-worn leather jacket or a vintage wool coat. Their home is a sanctuary of textures: rough-hewn wood, soft candlelight, dried flowers in glass jars. They may collect odd trinkets-a rusted key, a pressed leaf, a postcard from a place they’ve never been-each holding a story only they understand.

In philosophy, they are drawn to thinkers who embrace the tragic beauty of existence-Nietzsche’s amor fati, Schopenhauer’s contemplation of suffering, or Keats’s negative capability. They do not shy away from darkness but see it as essential to the full spectrum of human experience.

Relationships

They love deeply but guardedly, for they know that intensity can be both a gift and a burden. Their relationships are marked by profound emotional exchanges, but they may struggle with permanence-always half-expecting the moment to dissolve like mist. They are the kind of lover who writes long letters by candlelight but hesitates to send them, who treasures a single shared glance more than a thousand empty words.

Friendship, to them, is sacred but rare. They do not suffer small talk gladly, and their circle is small, composed of those who understand silence as well as speech. They may be accused of being aloof, but it is not indifference-it is the fear of diluting what is real with what is trivial.

Shadow

Yet the Romantic is not without their shadow. Their sensitivity, while a strength, can tip into self-indulgent melancholy. They may romanticize suffering, mistaking it for depth, or withdraw too far into their inner world, neglecting the mundane necessities of life. There is a danger of becoming lost in nostalgia, forever chasing ghosts of the past rather than engaging with the present.

At their worst, they may cultivate a kind of emotional aristocracy, believing that only they-and a select few-truly feel things as they should be felt. This can lead to isolation, a self-imposed exile from the ordinary world they secretly long to belong to but fear would dull their spirit.

Conclusion

At their core, this individual embodies the Romantic archetype, though not in the trivialized sense of mere sentimentality. Their Romanticism is of the Byronic kind-intense, introspective, and tinged with a quiet fatalism. They are drawn to beauty that is imperfect, to love that is bittersweet, to moments that cannot last. Their soul thrills at the sight of a fading sunset, the sound of rain on old rooftops, the scent of a forest after a storm. Life, to them, is a series of fleeting impressions to be felt deeply, even if those feelings bring sorrow.