Loveme The Onyx Parfum Tous
Fragrance Story
LoveMe The Onyx Parfum by Tous is a Oriental Floral fragrance for women. LoveMe The Onyx Parfum was launched in 2021. LoveMe The Onyx Parfum was created by Domitille Michalon Bertier and Christian Alori. Top notes are Hazelnut, Grapefruit and Peony; middle notes are Heliotrope and Black Orchid; base notes are Vanilla, Sandalwood and Vetiver.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Christian Alori
Christian Alori is a perfumer whose work spans accessible mass-market brands like Avon and Eudora to niche houses such as Granado and Ghalati. His catalog includes energetic masculine scents like Avon's 300 Km/h Pulse and Full Speed Boost, as well as floral compositions like Granado's Folia and Gardênia. Alori's creations often balance freshness with warmth, appealing to a wide range of preferences.
Fragrance Notes
Character Profile
The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Loveme The Onyx Parfum Tous
Essence
To wear Loveme The Onyx Parfum Tous is to embrace a duality-sensual yet mysterious, warm yet elusive. This fragrance, with its deep amber and woody accords, hints at a soul drawn to intensity, beauty, and the subtle art of seduction. The person who chooses it is, at their core, a Lover Archetype-one who thrives on connection, aesthetics, and the intoxicating dance of desire.
They are not merely a hedonist, though pleasure is undeniably important to them. Their pursuit of beauty is philosophical, a way of transcending the mundane. They believe that life should be felt deeply, tasted fully, and remembered vividly. Their presence lingers like the scent they wear-unforgettable, layered, impossible to pin down.
Shadow
Yet, like all archetypes, the Lover has its darker currents. Their need for intensity can lead to restlessness-no experience ever feels quite enough. They may chase the thrill of new connections, growing bored once the initial enchantment fades. This can make them seem fickle, even cruel, though they rarely intend to be.
Their aversion to the mundane may also make them impatient with routine, responsibility, or emotional labor. They might romanticize suffering, mistaking drama for depth. At worst, they can become self-indulgent, prioritizing their own pleasure over the needs of others.
Their greatest challenge is balance-to love deeply without losing themselves, to seek beauty without dismissing the ordinary, to embrace passion without burning out. When they master this, they become not just a fleeting presence, but a force of inspiration.
They are the kind of person who leaves an imprint on those they meet, not through force, but through the quiet power of their essence. Like The Onyx Parfum, they are a paradox-dark yet luminous, timeless yet ever-changing. And in that duality, they find their truth.
Conclusion
Their tastes are refined but never ostentatious. They prefer understated luxury-a well-tailored blazer, a piece of antique jewelry, a leather-bound book. Their home is a sanctuary of textures: velvet drapes, dark wood, the faint glow of candlelight. They surround themselves with objects that tell stories, for they believe that beauty must have depth.
Philosophically, they reject the notion that life must be purely rational or utilitarian. They see the world as a canvas, and themselves as both artist and muse. Their values center around passion, authenticity, and the pursuit of meaningful experiences. Superficiality repels them; they crave conversations that unravel souls, glances that speak volumes, moments that feel like destiny.