Nenuphar Trip:tych
Fragrance Story
Nenuphar by TRIP:TYCH is a Aromatic Aquatic fragrance for women and men. Nenuphar was launched in 2021. Top notes are Water Lily, Tobacco, Earthy Notes, Water Lily Leaf, Musk and Moss; middle notes are Water Lily, Lily of the Valley, Algae, Musk and Mandarin Orange; base notes are Water Lily, Earthy Notes, Lily of the Valley, Geranium, Tuberose and Ylang Ylang.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Unknown Perfumer
Fragrance Notes
Top Notes
First impression · 15-30 min
Heart Notes
Core character · 2-4 hours
Base Notes
Lasting impression · 4+ hours
Nenuphar Trip:tych by TRIP:TYCH offers a distinctive olfactory experience that stands out from other fragrances in its category.
Crafted with the finest ingredients and a blend of traditional and modern perfumery techniques, this fragrance represents the pinnacle of the perfumer's art.
Nenuphar Trip:tych embodies the distinctive style of TRIP:TYCH while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Dreamer Archetype: Portrait of Nenuphar Trip:tych
Essence
To wear Nenuphar Trip:tych is to embrace the ephemeral-an olfactory journey through water lilies, damp earth, and the faintest whisper of something untamed. The person who chooses this fragrance is not merely selecting a scent; they are curating an atmosphere, a private mythology. They are, at their core, a Dreamer-one who dwells in the liminal spaces between reality and reverie.
The Dreamer archetype, as defined by Jung, is the eternal wanderer of the psyche, the one who seeks meaning in symbols, beauty in the intangible. They are drawn to the poetic, the mysterious, the half-seen. Their life is not a linear path but a series of impressions, like watercolors bleeding into one another.
Style & Aesthetic
Their tastes are refined but never ostentatious. They prefer the muted elegance of raw linen, the texture of handmade paper, the weight of an old book in their hands. Their home is a sanctuary of curated objects-a dried lotus pod in a glass jar, a well-worn copy of Rilke’s Letters to a Young Poet, a record player spinning Debussy’s Clair de Lune. They are drawn to art that evokes longing, whether it’s the melancholic brushstrokes of Turner or the haunting prose of Marguerite Duras.
Philosophically, they reject rigid dogma. Truth, for them, is not found in absolutes but in the spaces between-the pause in a conversation, the way light shifts before dusk. They may dabble in Zen Buddhism or Jungian analysis, not as doctrines but as lenses to refine their inner world.
Relationships
They love deeply but often abstractly. Their relationships are intense yet elusive, like the scent of Nenuphar itself-there one moment, vanishing the next. They crave connection but fear the weight of expectation. Partners may find them enchanting yet frustrating, for the Dreamer is prone to retreating into solitude when reality becomes too demanding.
Friends admire their insight, their ability to see beyond surfaces, but may grow weary of their occasional detachment. The Dreamer’s greatest gift in love is their capacity for deep empathy; their greatest flaw is their reluctance to fully inhabit the present.
Shadow
Yet, no archetype exists without its shadow. The Dreamer risks becoming lost in their own mind, mistaking introspection for action. They may indulge in self-absorption, romanticizing melancholy to the point of paralysis. At their worst, they are the eternal observer, never fully engaging with life, always one step removed.
Their avoidance of mundanity can manifest as irresponsibility-unpaid bills, forgotten appointments, a trail of half-finished projects. They may resent those who demand practicality from them, seeing it as a betrayal of their poetic nature.
Conclusion
The Dreamer’s challenge is to bridge the gap between vision and embodiment. They must learn that beauty is not only in the abstract but in the act of creation-whether that means finishing a poem, tending a garden, or simply showing up for someone who needs them. When they achieve this balance, they become not just dreamers but alchemists, turning the ephemeral into something tangible, fleeting impressions into lasting meaning.
To love a Dreamer is to accept that they will always be slightly out of reach-but therein lies their magic. They remind us that life is not merely to be lived but to be felt, questioned, and, above all, dreamed.