Fleur De Lune Strangers Parfumerie
At a glance
Is Fleur De Lune Strangers Parfumerie worth trying?
Fleur De Lune by Strangers Parfumerie is a Floral fragrance for women.
- Best match
- Evening, Special Occasion wear in Spring, Summer
- Performance feel
- Good longevity with Moderate sillage
- Signature profile
- white floral, floral, powdery with Tuberose, Ylang-Ylang, White Iris
The first impression
Fleur De Lune by Strangers Parfumerie is a Floral fragrance for women. Fleur De Lune was launched in 2020. The nose behind this fragrance is Prin Lomros.
What shapes the scent
The perfumer behind it
Prin Lomros
Prin Lomros is a Thai perfumer and founder of the Prin brand, recognized for bold, complex compositions that often blend natural and synthetic materials. Their portfolio includes works for Azman and Der Duft, as well as their own line featuring scents like Ahuizotl and Aran. Lomros is known for pushing boundaries with rich, animalic, and resinous accords.
Notes pyramid
The mood it creates
The Mystic Archetype: Portrait of Fleur De Lune Strangers Parfumerie
Essence
The Mystic communes with realms beyond sight. Fleur de Lune's avalanche of white florals-tuberose, gardenia, lily-feels less like a bouquet than a séance summoning lost spirits. Peru balsam and cedar in the base anchor its ethereality to sacred groves.
Style & Aesthetic
They favor flowing silks in moonlit hues, often layered with translucent shawls. The fragrance's peach blossom and bergamot notes reflect their love for iridescent mother-of-pearl buttons or hairpins shaped like crescent moons.
Philosophy & Values
They seek the divine in delicate things. The interplay of ylang-ylang and vanilla mirrors their belief that ecstasy and devotion are twin flames. Even their tears, they say, water celestial gardens.
Relationships
They attract seekers who mistake their mystery for malleability. Lovers are drawn to the scent's cotton flower softness, only to find the white iris at its core is coolly impenetrable.
Lifestyle
They burn midnight candles to read grimoires in extinct languages. The fragrance's magnolia and guaiac wood evoke their habit of pressing flowers between pages of medieval herbals, staining parchment with ghostly pigments.
Shadow
Transcendence can become escapism. When the tuberose grows too narcotic, they risk floating away entirely-a wisp of gardenia on the wind, leaving only a stain of orris root where they once stood.
Conclusion
Fleur de Lune is the scent of a veil between worlds, thin enough to see through but too strong to tear. It doesn't belong to the wearer; the wearer belongs to it, just as the Mystic belongs to the unseen.