Myrrhe Mystère Tom Ford

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2023
Strong
Sillage
Excellent
Longevity
Fall
Best Season
Evening
Best For

Fragrance Story

Myrrhe Mystère by Tom Ford is a Oriental Woody fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Myrrhe Mystère was launched in 2023. The nose behind this fragrance is Rodrigo Flores-Roux.

Composition Profile

amber 100%
warm spicy 85%
powdery 70%
balsamic 60%
woody 50%
vanilla 40%
sweet 35%
musky 30%
aromatic 25%
leather 20%

About the Perfumer

Rodrigo Flores-Roux

Rodrigo Flores-Roux

Rodrigo Flores-Roux is a perfumer who has contributed to a wide range of fragrance houses including 27 87, Aedes de Venustas, Aether, Alford & Hoff, Anine Bing, and Arquiste. His notable works include Hakuna Matata, Oeillet Bengale, Methaldone, Suprae, and A Grove By The Sea. Flores-Roux is recognized for his versatile and creative approach to scent.

Fragrance Notes

All Notes

Complete scent profile

Myrrh Myrrh
Myrhh Myrhh
Sandalwood Sandalwood
Vanilla Vanilla
Musk Musk
Leather Leather
Absinthe Absinthe
Jasmine Jasmine

Character Profile

The Alchemist Archetype: Portrait of Myrrhe Mystère Tom Ford

Essence

To wear Myrrhe Mystère by Tom Ford is to drape oneself in the scent of transformation-resinous, enigmatic, and steeped in the weight of ancient wisdom. This fragrance, with its smoky myrrh, velvety labdanum, and whispers of incense, does not belong to those who seek the obvious or the ephemeral. It is chosen by one who moves through the world as both seeker and sage, a figure who understands that meaning is not given but forged.

This person is most closely aligned with the Alchemist, an archetype rooted in the pursuit of transformation-both of the self and the world. Like the medieval mystics who sought to turn base metals into gold, they are drawn to the hidden, the symbolic, the process of refinement. Their life is an experiment, a slow distillation of experience into something richer and more enduring. They are not content with surfaces; they crave depth, resonance, the alchemy of ideas and sensations.

Relationships

They do not give their intimacy lightly. Their relationships are deep but few, forged in the fires of shared exploration rather than casual companionship. They attract those who sense their gravity, who are drawn to the quiet intensity beneath their measured words. Their love is not effusive but profound-a slow-burning devotion, a pact between fellow travelers on the path of becoming.

Yet they are not without warmth. Those who earn their trust find a rare loyalty, a willingness to stand in the depths with another. They are the confidant who listens not to reply but to truly hear, the friend who offers not platitudes but piercing insight.

Shadow

But every archetype has its shadow, and theirs is the danger of isolation, of becoming so enamored with their own inner world that they lose touch with the living, breathing present. They may grow overly austere, mistaking detachment for wisdom, solitude for strength. There is a temptation here-to see themselves as above the mundane, to disdain those who do not share their depth.

Their flaw is not malice but distance. They can become the hermit in their tower, so focused on their own transformation that they forget the alchemy of human connection. They must remember that gold, too, must be worn to shine.

Conclusion

Their tastes are deliberate, textured, often leaning toward the archaic and the arcane. They might collect rare books, antique maps, or fragments of forgotten philosophies. Their home is a curated space-dark woods, deep hues, the flicker of candlelight-each object chosen for its weight, its history, its quiet power. They do not follow trends; they excavate them, seeking the timeless beneath the transient.

In style, they favor the austere and the ceremonial. Flowing silhouettes, rich fabrics, the occasional glint of metal or stone-their wardrobe is less about fashion than about ritual. They dress as if preparing for an unseen rite, an inner journey made manifest in cloth and texture.

Philosophically, they are drawn to the esoteric, the liminal spaces where meaning blurs. They might find solace in Jung, in alchemical texts, in the poetry of Rilke or the meditations of Marcus Aurelius. They believe in the necessity of darkness, in the fertile void from which understanding emerges. Their values are not those of the crowd; they prize wisdom over comfort, authenticity over approval.