Vetiver & Petitgrain Splash Tauerville

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2015
Moderate
Sillage
Good
Longevity
Spring
Best Season
Casual
Best For

Fragrance Story

Vetiver & Petitgrain Splash by Tauerville is a Citrus Aromatic fragrance for women and men. Vetiver & Petitgrain Splash was launched in 2015. The nose behind this fragrance is Andy Tauer.

Composition Profile

aromatic 100%
white floral 85%
citrus 70%
woody 60%
green 50%
earthy 40%
sweet 35%

About the Perfumer

Andy Tauer

Andy Tauer

Andy Tauer is an independent Swiss perfumer known for his artisanal approach and self-founded Tauer Perfumes. His style blends rich, resinous, and ambered accords with a distinct desert-inspired warmth, often featuring saffron, cedar, and tobacco. Notable creations from our catalog include the iconic L'Air du Desert Marocain, the leathery Lonestar Memories, and the floral-spiced Lys Du Desert Decennial. His work has helped define modern niche perfumery, emphasizing handcrafted quality and evocative storytelling.

Fragrance Notes

All Notes

Complete scent profile

Petitgrain Petitgrain
Vetiver Vetiver
Orange Blossom Orange Blossom
Unique Character

Vetiver & Petitgrain Splash Tauerville by Tauerville 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

Vetiver & Petitgrain Splash Tauerville embodies the distinctive style of Tauerville while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.

Character Profile

The Alchemist Archetype: Portrait of Vetiver & Petitgrain Splash Tauerville

Essence

This person is defined by the Alchemist archetype-a seeker who transforms raw experience into refined wisdom. Like the fragrance they favor, they are earthy yet luminous, rooted in the depths of the soil (vetiver) while reaching toward the crisp, citrus-bitter brightness of petitgrain. The Alchemist does not merely exist; they distill life into meaning.

Vetiver & Petitgrain Splash is a paradox-dark and green, smoky yet fresh. It does not surrender to easy sweetness but lingers in complexity. So too does this person resist simple categorization. They are drawn to the tension between shadow and light, the interplay of the primal and the polished.

Style & Aesthetic

Their world is one of controlled contrast. They dress with deliberate restraint-linen and wool, structured but never stiff. Their home is a sanctuary of organic textures: unvarnished wood, aged brass, and the faintest scent of dried herbs. They prefer objects that bear the marks of time, believing wear to be a form of authenticity.

In art, they gravitate toward the unfinished and the suggestive-sketches over hyperrealism, ambient soundscapes over predictable melodies. They drink black coffee or bitter amaro, savoring the astringency. Their palate rejects cloying sweetness, just as their mind rejects platitudes.

Philosophy & Values

They believe in transformation through friction. Comfort is not their aim; growth is. They see life as a series of alchemical reactions-suffering into wisdom, chaos into order, base instincts into higher understanding. Stoic by nature, they endure discomfort with quiet resolve, but they are not ascetic. They indulge in sensory pleasures, provided they carry depth.

Their morality is self-forged, not inherited. They distrust dogma but respect discipline. They value independence above belonging, though they crave a rare kind of kinship-one that does not demand conformity. Their loyalty is fierce but conditional; they withdraw from those who mistake their silence for weakness.

Relationships

They are selectively intimate. Many know their surface-composed, observant, slightly detached-but few are permitted into the inner sanctum. When they love, it is with a quiet intensity, a devotion that does not need to announce itself. Their relationships thrive on mutual evolution; stagnation is a slow death.

Yet their independence can become isolation. They mistake solitude for strength, forgetting that even the most self-sufficient alchemist needs a crucible-another soul to reflect their transformations back to them. Their shadow is pride, the belief that they alone can refine themselves.

Shadow

The Alchemist’s greatest flaw is the illusion of self-sufficiency. They disdain neediness in others and themselves, sometimes confusing vulnerability with weakness. Their refusal to lean on others can harden into emotional austerity, a fear of true interdependence.

They also risk over-intellectualizing their emotions, distilling raw feeling into abstract thought until the pulse of life grows faint. The very process that refines them can also sterilize them, leaving them brilliant but bloodless.

Conclusion

They are neither entirely of the soil nor the sky, but in the space between-where roots meet air. Their life is a work in progress, a perpetual experiment. They will never settle, never fully arrive, and that is both their power and their burden.

To know them is to witness a mind in motion, a soul that refuses stagnation. But to love them is to accept that they will always be slightly out of reach-not because they do not care, but because they are forever refining, forever becoming.