Old Books The Perfumer's Story By Azzi

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2015

At a glance

Is Old Books The Perfumer's Story By Azzi worth trying?

Old Books by The Perfumer's Story by Azzi is a Oriental Woody fragrance for women and men.

Best match
Evening, Special Occasion wear in Fall, Winter
Performance feel
Very Good longevity with Moderate sillage
Signature profile
amber, woody, warm spicy with Patchouli, Incense, Olibanum

The first impression

Old Books by The Perfumer's Story by Azzi is a Oriental Woody fragrance for women and men. Old Books was launched in 2015. The nose behind this fragrance is Azzi Glasser.

What shapes the scent

amber 100%
woody 85%
warm spicy 70%
balsamic 60%
aromatic 50%
patchouli 40%
smoky 35%
earthy 30%

The perfumer behind it

Azzi Glasser

Azzi Glasser

Azzi Glasser is a British perfumer known for her work with fashion and lifestyle brands, including Bella Freud and Laura Ashley. Her style is characterized by bold, narrative-driven scents that often blend unexpected notes to evoke emotion and memory. She created the distinctive leather-and-incense fragrance Ginsberg Is God for Bella Freud and the fresh, floral Emma for Laura Ashley, showcasing her range from edgy to elegant.

Notes pyramid

All Notes

Complete scent profile

Patchouli Patchouli
Incense Incense
Olibanum Olibanum
Cedar Cedar
Myrrh Myrrh
Amber Amber
Vetiver Vetiver
elemi elemi

The mood it creates

The Sage Archetype: Portrait of Old Books The Perfumer's Story By Azzi

Essence

Old Books embodies the Sage archetype, a seeker of wisdom and keeper of esoteric knowledge. The fragrance's warm, woody-incense blend evokes the quiet reverence of a library at dusk, where ancient truths linger in the air. Patchouli and myrrh suggest sacred texts, while amber and vetiver ground the scent in earthy contemplation.

They are drawn to solitude and depth, finding beauty in the patina of time. The scent's smoky balsamic quality mirrors their introspective nature-a mind that burns slowly but brightly, illuminating shadows with measured curiosity.

Style & Aesthetic

Their wardrobe favors tailored layers in muted tones-charcoal wool, linen shirts with ink stains, antique leather satchels. Spaces they inhabit smell of beeswax candles and oak shelves, where every object holds a story. The aesthetic is monastic yet sensual; austerity softened by the warmth of well-worn pages.

Philosophy & Values

They believe truth is layered like vellum-to be handled carefully, decoded through patience. The interplay of incense and cedar in the fragrance mirrors their balance between spiritual seeking and intellectual rigor. Time is their ally; they trust only what has endured centuries of scrutiny.

Relationships

They attract fellow seekers-those who appreciate silence as much as discourse. Romantic partners are often artists or historians who share their reverence for the past. Conversations unfold like rare book acquisitions: deliberate, treasured, sometimes frustratingly opaque.

Lifestyle

Mornings begin with black tea and handwritten journals. They frequent secondhand bookshops, running fingers along spines as if reading braille. Evenings are for translating obscure texts or debating philosophy over single-malt whisky. The scent lingers on their scarf like a private secret.

Shadow

Their love of antiquity can calcify into resistance to change. The very amber that grounds them may trap them in nostalgia. At worst, they become the relic they study-brittle, disconnected from living breath.

Conclusion

Old Books is an olfactory manuscript, its pages steeped in the Sage's quiet fire. To wear it is to carry a torch through history's labyrinth, where every note-from elemi's brightness to myrrh's solemnity-whispers: seek, but do not presume to possess.