Victorian Picnic Solstice Scents

For Women
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2019
Moderate
Sillage
Good
Longevity
Spring
Best Season
Special Occasion
Best For

Fragrance Story

Victorian Picnic by Solstice Scents is a fragrance for women. Victorian Picnic was launched in 2019. The nose behind this fragrance is Angela St.John.

Composition Profile

white floral 100%
citrus 85%
sweet 70%
floral 60%
fresh 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

Orange Blossom Orange Blossom
Wisteria Wisteria
Cupcake Cupcake
Lemon Lemon
Jasmine Jasmine
White Wine White Wine
Japanese Loquat Japanese Loquat
Rhododendron Rhododendron
Unique Character

Victorian Picnic Solstice Scents by Solstice Scents offers a distinctive olfactory experience that stands out from other fragrances in its category.

Artisanal Creation

Crafted with the finest ingredients and a blend of traditional and modern perfumery techniques, this fragrance represents the pinnacle of the perfumer's art.

Signature Style

Victorian Picnic Solstice Scents embodies the distinctive style of Solstice Scents while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.

Character Profile

The Romantic Archetype: Portrait of Victorian Picnic Solstice Scents

Essence

To wear Victorian Picnic by Solstice Scents is to embrace an olfactory reverie-a blend of honeyed cakes, wildflowers, sun-warmed grass, and the faintest whisper of aged parchment. It is nostalgia distilled, a fragrance that does not merely evoke the past but insists on its lingering presence. The person who cherishes this scent is not merely drawn to history; they are in dialogue with it, weaving its textures into their being. Their soul is governed by the Romantic archetype, one who seeks beauty in the ephemeral, meaning in the sentimental, and depth in the delicate.

Style & Aesthetic

Their world is curated with intention. Their home is a cabinet of curiosities-vintage teacups, pressed botanicals, lace draped over aged wood. They prefer muted, earthy tones, but with flashes of deep burgundy or gold, as if their surroundings must whisper rather than shout. They read poetry not for intellectual exercise but for the way certain lines lodge in the chest like a forgotten melody. Keats, Dickinson, and Rilke are their companions, not because they seek escapism, but because these poets articulate the ache of existence with precision.

Their style is anachronistic without being costume-like. A high-collared blouse, a cameo brooch, a skirt that rustles like autumn leaves-these are not affectations but extensions of their inner world. They reject the disposable trends of modernity, not out of superiority, but because they crave permanence in a world that rushes forward without reflection.

They rise early, not out of obligation but because dawn is when the world feels most theirs. Mornings are ritualistic: grinding coffee beans by hand, opening a window to let in the first light, perhaps sketching in a journal. Their work, if they can choose it, is creative-writing, art, curation, horticulture. If bound to a conventional job, they carve out pockets of poetry within it: a desk adorned with fresh flowers, lunch breaks spent in a nearby garden.

Evenings are for slow pleasures-reading by candlelight, playing piano, walking through dew-damp grass. They are not ascetics; they savor good wine, rich food, the warmth of a hearth. But these indulgences are never mere consumption; they are acts of communion with the senses.

Philosophy & Values

They believe in the sacredness of small things: the way light filters through stained glass, the weight of a well-bound book, the quiet pleasure of brewing tea in a porcelain cup. Their philosophy is not one of grand manifestos but of accumulated intimacies. They distrust the cult of efficiency, the flattening of experience into mere productivity. For them, life’s meaning is found in lingering-over a conversation, a scent, a moment of stillness.

Yet this devotion to beauty is not passive. They are archivists of feeling, preserving what others might discard. They collect letters, dried flowers, fragments of music-each a talisman against forgetting. Their values are rooted in tenderness, but also in a quiet defiance: they refuse to let the world’s harshness erode their capacity for wonder.

Relationships

Their friendships are deep but few. They do not thrive in crowds; too much noise scatters their thoughts. Instead, they seek kindred spirits-those who understand the weight of a silence, the significance of a glance. Their love language is the handwritten note, the carefully chosen gift, the act of remembering a small detail years later.

Romantically, they are drawn to souls who share their reverence for the poetic. They do not love lightly; their affections are slow-burning, intense, sometimes overwhelming. They are capable of great devotion, but their shadow emerges here: they may idealize partners, projecting onto them a perfection no human can sustain. When disillusioned, they retreat into melancholy, nursing wounds that are as much self-inflicted as real.

Shadow

Their greatest strength-their ability to see the world through a lens of beauty-is also their vulnerability. They risk becoming lost in their own nostalgia, mistaking the past for an idyll that never truly was. At times, they may withdraw too deeply into their inner world, neglecting the demands of the present. Their sensitivity, though profound, can curdle into oversentimentality or a reluctance to face life’s harsher truths.

They may also struggle with a quiet pride, believing their refined tastes make them more perceptive than others. This can lead to a subtle condescension toward those who live more pragmatically. Their challenge is to balance their idealism with groundedness-to love the past without being trapped by it, to cherish beauty without disdaining the mundane.