Pool Tsu Lange Yor
Fragrance Story
POOL by TSU LANGE YOR is a Floral Fruity fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. POOL was launched in 2023. The nose behind this fragrance is Alexandra Monet. Top notes are Cucumber, Raspberry, Bergamot and Litchi; middle notes are Tomato Leaf, Cassis, Lily of the Valley and Coriander; base notes are Red Pepper, Musk and Ginger.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Alexandra Monet
Alexandra Monet is a French perfumer known for her work with major houses including 4711, Anthropologie, and Astier de Villatte. Her style often blends fresh, fruity, and floral notes with unexpected accents, as seen in the bright, green 4711 Acqua Colonia Bamboo & Watermelon and the spicy-sweet White Peach & Coriander. She also created the refined floral of 4711 Noble Rose and the warm, modern Vibrant Musk, demonstrating a versatility that spans both classic colognes and contemporary compositions.
Fragrance Notes
Pool Tsu Lange Yor by TSU LANGE YOR 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.
Pool Tsu Lange Yor embodies the distinctive style of TSU LANGE YOR while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Pool Tsu Lange Yor Devotee Archetype: Portrait of Pool Tsu Lange Yor
Essence
This person is most closely aligned with The Seeker, an archetype defined by a restless, insatiable curiosity and a deep yearning for meaning beyond the mundane. The Seeker is driven by the belief that there is always something more-more beauty, more truth, more experience-just beyond the horizon. Pool Tsu Lange Yor, with its aquatic freshness and lingering depth, mirrors this duality: it is both light and mysterious, evoking the vastness of the ocean while hinting at unseen depths.
Style & Aesthetic
Their aesthetic is one of effortless contradiction-minimalist yet layered, modern yet timeless. They favor clean lines and understated elegance, but with an edge: a vintage watch, an asymmetrical cut, or a single piece of jewelry that suggests a hidden story. Their wardrobe is curated, not cluttered, each item chosen for its ability to evoke a mood rather than follow a trend.
They are drawn to spaces that feel open yet intimate-loft apartments with high ceilings, seaside cottages with large windows, or dimly lit bookshops where time seems suspended. Their home is a sanctuary of sensory pleasures: well-worn books, a record player spinning jazz or ambient electronica, the faint scent of salt and citrus lingering in the air.
They are creatures of ritual, though they would never call it that. Mornings begin with black coffee and a few pages of poetry; evenings might involve long walks with no destination. They travel often, not for escapism but for the thrill of seeing the world through fresh eyes. Work is either a passion or a means to an end-they refuse to spend their days in drudgery, but their aversion to routine can make long-term projects difficult.
Their greatest strength is their adaptability, but this can also be their downfall. Without a fixed point, they risk becoming wanderers without a home, always searching but never arriving.
Philosophy & Values
Freedom is their highest ideal, but not in the reckless sense-rather, the freedom to explore, to question, to redefine. They reject dogma in all forms, whether spiritual, political, or social. Their philosophy is fluid, shaped by experience rather than doctrine. They believe in the power of intuition, trusting the unseen currents that guide them toward unexpected encounters and revelations.
Yet, this very fluidity can become their shadow. Their disdain for rigidity sometimes leads them to avoid commitment, whether in relationships, careers, or beliefs. They flirt with depth but fear being anchored, mistaking stagnation for stability.
Relationships
They attract others effortlessly, their presence magnetic yet elusive. People are drawn to their quiet intensity, the sense that they are always on the verge of a discovery. Their friendships are deep but few; they prefer meaningful exchanges over superficial chatter. Romantic partners find them enchanting but frustrating-they give just enough to intrigue, but retreat when things become too predictable.
Their shadow emerges in emotional evasion. They rationalize detachment as independence, leaving others feeling like temporary waypoints in their endless journey. They crave connection but fear engulfment, a paradox that leaves them oscillating between intimacy and solitude.
Shadow
The Seeker’s shadow is the refusal to ever find. They mistake motion for progress, mistrusting anything that feels too settled. They may romanticize their own restlessness, seeing themselves as tragically misunderstood when, in truth, they simply fear the vulnerability of standing still.
Yet, when they embrace both the journey and the destination, they become something rare: a person who has truly lived, not just passed through. Their fragrance, Pool Tsu Lange Yor, is the perfect metaphor-light enough to drift, deep enough to linger.