Running With The Wolves Untamed
Fragrance Story
Running With The Wolves by UNTAMED is a Leather fragrance for women and men. Running With The Wolves was launched in 2021. The nose behind this fragrance is Sunyata Calogeros-Smith. Top notes are Black Cherry, Sichuan Pepper and Red Apple; middle notes are Tuberose and Almond; base notes are Animal notes, Blonde Woods, Leather and Agarwood.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Sunyata Calogeros-Smith
Sunyata Calogeros-Smith is the founder of the UNTAMED perfume line, which emphasizes natural, botanical ingredients and artistic expression. Her fragrances often evoke landscapes and emotions, from the dark, earthy Chocolate Earth to the ethereal Ghost and the coastal Salish Sea. Each scent in the collection reflects her background in herbalism and a commitment to sustainable, handcrafted perfumery.
Fragrance Notes
Running With The Wolves Untamed by UNTAMED 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.
Running With The Wolves Untamed embodies the distinctive style of UNTAMED while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Untamed Soul Archetype: Portrait of Running With The Wolves Untamed
Essence
To wear Running With The Wolves Untamed is to declare allegiance to the wilderness within-an olfactory rebellion against domestication. This fragrance, with its raw, animalic warmth and untamed spirit, is the scent of someone who refuses to be caged by convention. They are the embodiment of the Outlaw archetype, the one who breaks chains-both societal and self-imposed-to reclaim their primal authenticity.
The Outlaw is not merely a rebel without a cause, but a force of nature that dismantles illusions. This person does not rage against order for its own sake; they reject only that which suffocates the soul. Their philosophy is simple: life is too vast to be lived within the confines of what is deemed "acceptable." They are drawn to the edges-of thought, of experience, of desire.
Their style mirrors this defiance. Leather jackets, worn-in boots, perhaps a single piece of jewelry with a wolf motif-nothing polished, nothing contrived. They move through the world with an effortless magnetism, not because they seek attention, but because they refuse to dull their edges for the comfort of others. Their presence is a challenge: Are you brave enough to be free?
Shadow
Yet, the Outlaw’s strength is also their weakness. Their refusal to conform can harden into stubbornness, making compromise feel like betrayal. They may mistake recklessness for courage, abandoning stability before it has a chance to deepen into something meaningful. Their relationships, while passionate, can burn too hot and too fast-leaving ashes where there could have been embers.
Their greatest fear is not danger, but domestication-the slow death of routine. Yet in this fear lies their blind spot: not all constraints are prisons. Some boundaries, like those of trust and commitment, are the very things that allow love to deepen. Without them, the Outlaw risks becoming a ghost-always running, never arriving.
This person is neither saint nor savage, but a living paradox. They are the storm and the stillness after, the howl and the silence that follows. Their life is a testament to the beauty and brutality of authenticity. They will never be tamed, but perhaps-if they allow it-they may learn that even wolves sometimes run in packs.
To love them is to love the wild. To know them is to know the scent of freedom-smoke, fur, and the electric thrill of the unknown.
Conclusion
Freedom is their highest value, but not in the hollow sense of mere indulgence. Their freedom is a discipline-an unrelenting commitment to self-truth. They despise hypocrisy and have little patience for those who live in half-truths. In relationships, they demand the same raw honesty they offer. Their love is fierce, protective, and unapologetically intense.
They thrive in environments where rules are fluid-artists, wanderers, and seekers orbit their world. Their taste in music, literature, and art leans toward the visceral: the poetry of Bukowski, the growl of blues, the unrestrained strokes of abstract expressionism. They do not merely consume art; they live it, as if creation itself were an act of defiance.