Fall Into Stars Oil Strangelove Nyc

Unisex
Parfum/Extrait
Year: Unknown
Strong
Sillage
Excellent
Longevity
Fall
Best Season
Evening
Best For

Fragrance Story

Fall Into Stars Oil by Strangelove NYC is a Oriental Spicy fragrance for women and men. The nose behind this fragrance is Christophe Laudamiel.

Composition Profile

oud 100%
amber 85%
warm spicy 70%
yellow floral 60%
woody 50%
balsamic 40%
rose 35%
green 30%
metallic 25%
sweet 20%

About the Perfumer

Christophe Laudamiel

Christophe Laudamiel

Christophe Laudamiel is a French perfumer known for his work with brands like Estée Lauder, Clinique, and Grandiflora. He created Pure White Linen Pink Coral and Youth-dew Amber Nude, as well as Clinique Happy Heart. His portfolio also includes niche creations like Grandiflora Saskia and Lazarus Douvos Rose 1845, showcasing his versatility.

Fragrance Notes

All Notes

Complete scent profile

Agarwood (Oud) Agarwood (Oud)
Narcissus Narcissus
Palisander Rosewood Palisander Rosewood
Saffron Saffron
Benzoin Benzoin
Rose Rose
Pink Pepper Pink Pepper
Henna Henna
Bergamot Bergamot
Ginger Ginger

Character Profile

The Alchemist Archetype: Portrait of Fall Into Stars Oil Strangelove Nyc

Essence

Archetype: The Visionary (Magician/Philosopher)

This person is drawn to Fall Into Stars by Strangelove NYC not by mere chance, but because the scent mirrors their essence-mysterious, transformative, and luminous. The fragrance, with its celestial blend of oud, rose, and smoky resins, speaks to a soul who seeks to transmute the ordinary into the extraordinary. They are an alchemist of experience, one who distills meaning from the mundane and finds magic in the overlooked.

Style & Aesthetic

Their aesthetic is one of controlled decadence-dark silks, antique jewelry, fabrics that whisper rather than shout. They favor textures that suggest history, as though their garments have absorbed the weight of past lives. There is an androgynous quality to their presence, a refusal to be confined by binary definitions.

They are drawn to fragrances that defy easy categorization-scents that are neither purely floral nor wholly animalic, but something in between. Fall Into Stars, with its duality of ethereal rose and primal oud, suits them perfectly. It is a fragrance for those who dwell in the liminal, the space between dream and waking.

They are nocturnal by nature, most alive in the hours when the world sleeps. Their home is a sanctuary-dimly lit, filled with books, curios, and the faint scent of incense. They may practice divination, meditation, or some form of esoteric study, seeking patterns in chaos.

Yet their pursuit of the sublime can lead to excess. They may indulge in substances, ideas, or experiences to the point of self-destruction, chasing transcendence at the cost of balance.

Philosophy & Values

They move through life with the quiet intensity of a philosopher who has glimpsed something beyond the veil. Reality, to them, is not fixed but malleable-a canvas to be reshaped by perception and will. They believe in the power of symbols, synchronicities, and the unseen forces that guide human destiny. Their values are not bound by convention; they prize depth over dogma, transformation over tradition.

Yet this very idealism can become their shadow. When the world refuses to bend to their vision, they may retreat into disillusionment or cynicism. The alchemist who fails to turn lead into gold risks becoming the hermit, lost in their own labyrinth of thought.

Relationships

They do not seek companionship lightly. Their relationships are alchemical experiments-intense, transformative, and sometimes volatile. They attract those who crave depth, but not all can withstand the heat of their inner furnace. Their love is a crucible; it refines or destroys.

Their shadow emerges in their tendency to intellectualize intimacy, to treat people as symbols rather than flesh-and-blood beings. They may withdraw when emotions become too raw, preferring the safety of abstraction.

Shadow

At their best, they are a beacon-a guide for those lost in the dark, showing them the hidden paths. At their worst, they become the trickster, lost in their own illusions, mistaking obsession for enlightenment.

But even in their flaws, there is beauty. For the alchemist knows that gold cannot exist without the dross. And so they continue their work-transforming, seeking, falling into stars.