Iced Wisteria Solstice Scents

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2023
Moderate
Sillage
Good
Longevity
Spring
Best Season
Casual
Best For

Fragrance Story

Iced Wisteria by Solstice Scents is a Floral Fruity Gourmand fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Iced Wisteria was launched in 2023. The nose behind this fragrance is Angela St.John.

Composition Profile

floral 100%
vanilla 85%
fresh 70%
sweet 60%
fresh spicy 50%

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

Wisteria Wisteria
Tahitian Vanilla Tahitian Vanilla
Cone Waffle Cone Waffle
Ice cream Ice cream
Lilac Lilac
Sugar Sugar

Character Profile

The Mystic Archetype: Portrait of Iced Wisteria Solstice Scents

Essence

This person is defined by the Mystic archetype, one who seeks meaning beyond the surface of things, drawn to the liminal spaces between reality and dream. The fragrance Iced Wisteria-cool, ethereal, with a whisper of floral melancholy-mirrors their essence: delicate yet resilient, enigmatic yet deeply felt. They are not merely a dreamer but a seeker, one who navigates life with an intuitive compass, attuned to the unseen currents beneath the mundane.

Style & Aesthetic

Their presence is understated yet arresting, like the first frost on petals-soft but with an undeniable sharpness. They favor muted tones-lavenders, silvers, pale blues-colors that evoke twilight and mist. Their clothing flows rather than constricts, as if they are always half-prepared to dissolve into the wind. Jewelry is minimal, often antique or symbolic: a silver crescent moon, a single amethyst. Their home is a sanctuary of quiet elegance-bookshelves lined with poetry and esoteric philosophy, candles flickering in glass holders, dried flowers pressed between pages.

They move through life at their own rhythm, rejecting the tyranny of hustle. Their work, if they must have it, is something that allows for contemplation-writing, art, healing professions, or even solitary trades like gardening or perfumery. They are drawn to the ephemeral-photography of fading light, music that feels like a memory, the art of tea brewing as a meditation.

Travel is sacred to them, but not in the way of tourists. They seek places that feel like echoes of another time-abandoned gardens, mist-covered hills, old libraries. They collect experiences like talismans, storing them away for the long nights when the world feels too cold.

Philosophy & Values

They believe in the sacredness of solitude, the necessity of retreat. The world is too loud, too abrasive, and they protect their inner stillness fiercely. They do not worship at the altar of productivity; instead, they measure life in moments of clarity-the way light filters through trees, the hush of snowfall, the scent of wisteria on a winter breeze. Their spirituality is fluid, neither dogmatic nor dismissive-they borrow from mysticism, nature worship, and quiet agnosticism, stitching together a personal cosmology.

Yet they are not passive. Their reverence for beauty is a quiet rebellion against the ugliness of the world. They believe in kindness, but not naivety-they know cruelty exists, and they choose grace anyway.

Relationships

They are not a hermit, but their connections are few, deep, and carefully chosen. They attract others like moths to a soft flame-those who sense their depth and want to bask in its glow. But they are selective, wary of those who would mistake their gentleness for weakness. Their love is profound but quiet, expressed in gestures rather than declarations: a handwritten letter, a shared silence, a single flower left on a pillow.

Romantically, they are drawn to those who understand the language of the unseen-a partner who does not demand explanations for their moods, who respects their need for solitude. Their relationships thrive on mutual mystery, an unspoken pact to never fully unravel one another.

Shadow

But the Mystic’s path is not without peril. Their love of solitude can curdle into isolation, their sensitivity into fragility. There are days when the world feels too heavy, and they withdraw too far, mistaking detachment for wisdom. Their melancholy, though often poetic, can become a cage-a habit of seeing beauty only in transience, never in permanence.

They may also struggle with a quiet arrogance, a belief that their depth makes them superior to those who live on the surface. They must remember that wisdom is not the sole property of the introspective; sometimes, the most profound truths are found in laughter, in touch, in the uncomplicated joy of being.

Conclusion

The Mystic lives in the tension between light and shadow, between the desire to transcend and the need to remain grounded. Iced Wisteria is their emblem-a fragrance that is both fragile and enduring, a reminder that beauty persists even in the coldest seasons. They are not meant for the center of the stage, nor for the complete obscurity of the hermit. Their purpose is to witness, to feel deeply, and to remind others that there is more to life than what can be grasped with the hands.

And if they sometimes lose themselves in the mist, they always return-wiser, wearier, but still carrying the scent of wisteria, still believing in the unseen.