Nåmaka Tanaïs
Fragrance Story
Nåmaka by Tanaïs is a Floral Aquatic fragrance for women and men. Nåmaka was launched in 2015. The nose behind this fragrance is Tanaïs. Top notes are Marine notes, White Grapefruit and Neroli; middle notes are Plumeria, Coconut Milk, Tiare Flower, Jasmine Sambac and Mimosa; base notes are Choya Nakh, Eucalyptus, Ambergris and Nutmeg.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Tanaïs
Tanaïs is a perfumer and writer who creates fragrances under her own name, including Ancients, Cosmic, and Heart Chakra. Her work often incorporates natural and spiritual elements, with scents like Lovers Rock and Mala. She explores themes of identity, nature, and emotion through her olfactory art.
Fragrance Notes
Nåmaka Tanaïs by Tanaïs offers a distinctive olfactory experience that stands out from other fragrances in its category.
Crafted with the finest ingredients and a blend of traditional and modern perfumery techniques, this fragrance represents the pinnacle of the perfumer's art.
Nåmaka Tanaïs embodies the distinctive style of Tanaïs while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Seeker Archetype: Portrait of Nåmaka Tanaïs
Essence
To wear Nåmaka Tanaïs is to embrace the scent of the untamed-salt-kissed skin, sun-warmed driftwood, and the faintest whisper of distant storms. This fragrance does not announce itself with bravado but lingers like an unanswered question, drawing others in with its quiet magnetism. The person who chooses it is not one for easy definitions; they are a wanderer of both land and mind, forever chasing horizons yet unseen.
Philosophy & Values
The Seeker’s philosophy is one of radical openness. They distrust dogma, preferring the wisdom of direct experience. If they have a creed, it is this: To live is to explore, and to explore is to be alive. They value freedom above all else-not as mere license, but as the necessary condition for self-discovery.
Yet this very freedom can become a paradox. The Seeker’s relentless pursuit of the next horizon can leave them unmoored, unable to fully inhabit the present. Relationships may be transient, not out of indifference, but because deep connection requires a kind of stillness they struggle to maintain. They are drawn to kindred spirits-fellow wanderers, thinkers, and creators-but their love is often bittersweet, tinged with the knowledge that they may one day leave.
Shadow
Every archetype has its shadow, and for the Seeker, it is the Exile-the fear that they do not truly belong anywhere. Their strength lies in their adaptability, but this can curdle into rootlessness, a sense of being perpetually other. They may romanticize solitude, yet secretly long for a home they cannot name.
At their worst, they become restless to the point of self-sabotage, abandoning projects, people, or places just as they begin to take root. Their aversion to routine can harden into a refusal to commit, even when commitment might bring depth they crave. The fragrance they wear-Nåmaka Tanaïs-becomes both a comfort and a reminder: a scent that evokes the sea, yet never lets them forget they are always at its mercy.
Conclusion
The dominant archetype here is the Seeker-the restless soul who thrives on discovery, transformation, and the pursuit of meaning. This is not mere wanderlust, though it may manifest as such; it is a deeper, more insistent pull toward the unknown. The Seeker does not settle, not because they are incapable of commitment, but because stagnation feels like a slow death. They are drawn to the edges of maps, both literal and metaphorical, where certainty dissolves into possibility.
Their life is an ongoing experiment-a series of encounters, ideas, and landscapes that shape them without ever fully claiming them. They might be a traveler, an artist, a philosopher, or simply someone who refuses to be defined by a single role. Their tastes reflect this fluidity: minimalist yet textured, natural yet sophisticated. They favor raw linen, well-worn leather, and the kind of jewelry that looks like it was salvaged from an ancient shipwreck. Their home, if they have one, is a curated sanctuary of found objects-driftwood sculptures, sun-bleached books, and candles that smell of distant shores.