Mojito Love Ulric De Varens

For Women
Eau de Toilette
Year: 2019
Moderate
Sillage
Moderate
Longevity
Summer
Best Season
Casual
Best For

Fragrance Story

Mojito Love by Ulric de Varens is a Floral Fruity Gourmand fragrance for women. Mojito Love was launched in 2019. Top notes are Tonic Water, Sugar Cane, Mint, Lime and Lemon Zest; middle notes are Floral Notes and Rose; base notes are Sugar, Coconut Nectar and Musk.

Composition Profile

sweet 100%
citrus 85%
aromatic 70%
coconut 60%
green 50%
vanilla 40%
fresh spicy 35%
lactonic 30%
aldehydic 25%

About the Perfumer

Unknown Perfumer

Fragrance Notes

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Tonic Water Tonic Water
Sugar Cane Sugar Cane
Mint Mint
Lime Lime
Lemon Zest Lemon Zest

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Floral Notes Floral Notes
Rose Rose

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Sugar Sugar
Coconut Nectar Coconut Nectar
Musk Musk
Unique Character

Mojito Love Ulric De Varens by Ulric de Varens offers a distinctive olfactory experience that stands out from other fragrances in its category.

Artisanal Creation

Crafted with the finest ingredients and a blend of traditional and modern perfumery techniques, this fragrance represents the pinnacle of the perfumer's art.

Signature Style

Mojito Love Ulric De Varens embodies the distinctive style of Ulric de Varens while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.

Character Profile

The Mojito Love Enthusiast Archetype: Portrait of Mojito Love Ulric De Varens

Essence

The person who gravitates toward Mojito Love by Ulric de Varens is most closely aligned with the Explorer archetype-a seeker of novelty, sensation, and unbridled experience. Like the fragrance itself-fresh, citrusy, effervescent, with a hint of playful mischief-they embody a restless curiosity, an insatiable appetite for life’s pleasures, and a refusal to be confined by convention.

The Explorer thrives on movement, whether physical or intellectual. They are drawn to the unknown, the uncharted, the intoxicating rush of discovery. Yet, like all archetypes, this one casts a shadow: a tendency toward rootlessness, superficiality, and an avoidance of depth when commitment becomes inconvenient.

Philosophy & Values

To them, life is not a problem to be solved but a feast to be devoured. They reject rigid dogma, preferring instead a philosophy of fluidity-carpe diem with a twist of irony. They believe in pleasure as a form of wisdom, in laughter as a sacred act, in the beauty of fleeting moments.

Yet beneath their carefree exterior lies a quiet defiance. They resist anything that threatens to pin them down-routine, obligation, the slow erosion of time. Their greatest fear is stagnation, the horror of becoming predictable. They would rather burn out than rust.

Relationships

In love, they are magnetic but elusive. They draw people in with their charm, their wit, their ability to make even the mundane feel like an adventure. But commitment is a delicate negotiation. They crave connection yet fear the weight of expectation. Their partners often find themselves intoxicated by their energy but frustrated by their reluctance to settle.

Friendships, however, are where they thrive. They are the ones who drag their companions to hidden bars, who remember obscure trivia, who send postcards from unexpected places. Their loyalty is fierce-not in the form of daily check-ins, but in the way they will cross continents for someone they love.

Shadow

The Explorer’s greatest strength-their refusal to be tamed-can also be their undoing. Their aversion to routine sometimes borders on self-sabotage; they abandon projects, relationships, even themselves when things grow too familiar. They mistake movement for growth, mistaking the thrill of the new for true evolution.

There is a melancholy beneath their laughter-a quiet awareness that no matter how far they roam, they cannot outrun themselves. The shadow whispers: What if all this running is just another cage?

Conclusion

The lover of Mojito Love is neither entirely light nor entirely shadow-they are both, in shifting measure. They live in the tension between freedom and belonging, between the joy of discovery and the hunger for something deeper.

Perhaps, in the end, their true journey is not outward but inward-a quest to reconcile their restless spirit with the quiet truth that even explorers must, sometimes, come home.