No. 28 The Fragrance Design Studio
Fragrance Story
No. 28 by The Fragrance Design Studio is a Floral Woody Musk fragrance for women and men. No. 28 was launched in 2013. The nose behind this fragrance is Cecile Hua.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Cecile Hua
Cecile Hua has composed fragrances for 4711, Amouroud, Arielle Shoshana, and Atelier Cologne. Her work ranges from fresh citrus blends like 4711 Acqua Colonia Pink Pepper & Grapefruit to deeper floral and woody creations such as Dark Orchid. She is known for her ability to balance clarity with complexity across different styles.
Fragrance Notes
Character Profile
The Alchemist Archetype: Portrait of No. 28 The Fragrance Design Studio
Essence
To wear No. 28 by The Fragrance Design Studio is to embrace transformation-an olfactory elixir that blends the sacred and the sensual, the ephemeral and the eternal. The person who chooses this fragrance is not merely seeking a scent but an experience, a distillation of their essence into something both refined and enigmatic. They are, at their core, an Alchemist-one who transmutes the raw materials of life into something greater, who seeks meaning in the interplay of shadow and light.
The Alchemist is a seeker, a philosopher of the senses. They are drawn to complexity, to fragrances that unfold in layers rather than announce themselves in a single breath. No. 28-with its interplay of bergamot, jasmine, and sandalwood-mirrors their own nature: bright yet deep, luminous yet grounded. They are not content with superficial pleasures; they crave depth, resonance, the subtle alchemy of experience.
Their tastes are eclectic but deliberate. They might favor minimalist design with a single, striking artifact-a Japanese kintsugi bowl, a well-worn leather journal, an antique perfume bottle-each object chosen for its story, its patina of meaning. Their wardrobe is understated but textured: cashmere that whispers against the skin, linen that carries the memory of sunlight, a single piece of jewelry with personal significance. They move through the world with quiet confidence, neither ostentatious nor invisible.
Philosophy is not an abstract exercise for them but a lived reality. They believe in the transformative power of attention-that the way one observes the world alters it. Stoicism appeals to them in its discipline, but they are equally drawn to the mysticism of Rumi or the existential clarity of Camus. They do not seek answers so much as they seek the right questions, the ones that unravel and reweave the fabric of perception.
Shadow
Yet the Alchemist is not without their flaws. Their pursuit of refinement can curdle into perfectionism, an endless dissatisfaction with what is in favor of what could be. They may grow impatient with those who do not share their depth, dismissing simpler joys as frivolous. At their worst, they become the Hermit-isolated in their own mind, mistaking solitude for wisdom and detachment for enlightenment.
Their relationships may suffer from their exacting standards. They can be slow to trust, wary of vulnerability, and prone to overanalyzing emotions until they lose their warmth. They might withdraw when faced with chaos, preferring the controlled environment of their own making to the messy reality of human connection.
Even their appreciation for beauty can become a prison. They may hesitate to create, fearing their work will not match their vision, or they may grow disdainful of anything that fails to meet their aesthetic ideals. The very sensitivity that makes them perceptive can also make them brittle, unable to tolerate the crude, the loud, the unrefined.
Conclusion
The Alchemist’s greatest strength is their ability to see potential where others see only raw material. They are the friend who listens and reframes, the artist who finds beauty in imperfection, the thinker who synthesizes disparate ideas into something new. They are patient, understanding that true transformation takes time-whether in relationships, creative work, or self-discovery.
In relationships, they are neither clingy nor distant but deeply present. They do not love lightly; their affections are earned, but once given, they are steadfast. They value intimacy that is both intellectual and emotional, conversations that stretch into the early hours, silences that are comfortable but never empty.
Their lifestyle reflects their values: deliberate, unhurried, attuned to rhythm rather than routine. They might rise early to write or meditate, savor coffee like a ritual, walk without destination to observe the world in flux. They are not immune to pleasure, but they prefer it in its most distilled form-a perfectly ripe fig, the first note of a favorite symphony, the scent of rain on warm stone.