C 2 – Vanille Réglisse Unika
Fragrance Story
c 2 - Vanille Réglisse by Unika is a Oriental Vanilla fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. c 2 - Vanille Réglisse was launched in 2025. The nose behind this fragrance is Véronique Stambouli. Top notes are Candied Fruits, Tangerine and Bergamot; middle notes are Licorice, Saffron and Patchouli; base notes are Leather, Benzoin and Vanilla.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Véronique Stambouli
Véronique Stambouli is a perfumer known for her work with the Unika brand. She created C 2 - Vanille Réglisse, a fragrance that combines vanilla and licorice for a sweet yet aromatic profile. Her style often involves blending classic gourmand notes with unexpected twists. Stambouli's compositions are recognized for their balance and originality.
Fragrance Notes
Character Profile
The Sage Archetype: Portrait of C 2 - Vanille Réglisse Unika
Essence
To wear C 2 - Vanille Réglisse Unika is to embrace duality-warmth and depth, sweetness and intrigue. The person who chooses this fragrance is not one for fleeting pleasures or superficial charm. They are drawn to the interplay of opposites: the comforting embrace of vanilla, softened by time, and the enigmatic pull of licorice, dark and contemplative. This is the scent of a thinker, a seeker, someone who moves through life with quiet intensity, always probing beneath the surface.
They embody the Sage archetype, the eternal student of life, whose greatest joy is in understanding, interpreting, and distilling wisdom from experience. Knowledge is their sanctuary, curiosity their compass. Yet, like all archetypes, they cast a shadow-one that can slip into detachment, overanalysis, or even a subtle arrogance in their certainty.
Style & Aesthetic
Their aesthetic is understated but deliberate-nothing loud, nothing garish. They favor textures that invite touch: worn leather, thick-knit wool, the soft grain of well-read books. Their home is a curated refuge, filled with objects that tell stories-antique maps, handwritten notes, a collection of oddities gathered from travels or secondhand shops. They are drawn to the patina of time, the sense that things carry history within them.
In philosophy, they are neither rigidly dogmatic nor carelessly relativistic. They believe in the power of perspective, in the layers of meaning that unfold when one looks long enough. Stoicism appeals to them-not as a rejection of emotion, but as a discipline of mind. They are wary of blind faith, yet they respect mystery. Their spirituality, if they have one, is private, woven from personal revelation rather than doctrine.
Relationships
They do not collect friends; they cultivate them. Their circle is small, but their bonds run deep. Conversations with them are not exchanges of pleasantries but excavations-they want to know what moves you, what frightens you, what strange dreams visit you at night. They are the confidant, the one who listens with a stillness that makes others feel truly heard.
Yet intimacy is not always easy for them. Their mind is a labyrinth, and sometimes they retreat too far into its corridors, leaving others outside, waiting. They can be slow to trust, not out of fear, but out of a need to be sure the other person is willing to meet them where they are-in the realm of ideas, of unspoken truths.
Romantically, they are drawn to those who challenge them, who refuse to let them remain in their ivory tower of thought. Their love is not possessive; it is a shared journey, an ongoing dialogue. But if their partner seeks only surface-level connection, they will grow restless, quietly disappointed.
Shadow
The Sage’s greatest strength is also their weakness: their mind. They can become so enamored with understanding that they forget to live. Analysis becomes paralysis. They may dismiss emotion as irrational, mistaking detachment for wisdom. At their worst, they grow condescending, impatient with those who do not share their depth of thought.
There is also a quiet melancholy that lingers in them-the awareness that no matter how much they learn, some mysteries will always elude them. This can lead to periods of existential restlessness, a sense of being adrift in a universe too vast to ever fully grasp.
Conclusion
To truly flourish, they must remember that wisdom is not only found in books or solitude, but in the messiness of lived experience. They must learn to step out of their mind and into their body-to taste, to touch, to laugh without dissecting why. The vanilla in their fragrance reminds them of warmth, of sweetness uncomplicated by thought; the licorice, of the richness found in shadows.
They are not meant to have all the answers. They are meant to keep asking questions-while never forgetting to savor the world as it is, not just as they interpret it.