Islay Urbis Parfums
Fragrance Story
Islay by URBIS PARFUMS is a Oriental Woody fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Islay was launched in 2024. The nose behind this fragrance is Hélène Prévot. Top notes are Barley, Honey, Aromatic Notes, Woodsy Notes and Red Fruits; middle notes are Spices, Violet, Chamomile, Saffron and Cedar; base notes are Whiskey, Peat, Leather, Vanille, Amber, Musk and Oud.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Hélène Prévot
Hélène Prévot is a French perfumer who has created fragrances for multiple brands including Artist'o, Beautydrugs, and ETIKK Fragrances. Her portfolio includes Ciel, Nue, and Été for Artist'o, as well as Broadway, Cassis Fig, and Santal Azur for Beautydrugs. She also composed Pepper Wood and Tea Garden for ETIKK Fragrances.
Fragrance Notes
Islay Urbis Parfums by URBIS PARFUMS 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.
Islay Urbis Parfums embodies the distinctive style of URBIS PARFUMS while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Islay Urbis Parfums
Essence
The person who cherishes Islay by Urbis Parfums is, at their core, an Explorer-a seeker of raw, untamed experiences. This fragrance, with its smoky peat, maritime brine, and medicinal whispers of iodine, does not merely scent the skin; it tells a story of defiance against the mundane. The Explorer is restless, drawn to the edges of the world and the self, where comfort dissolves into something more primal. They are not content with the well-trodden path; they crave the sting of salt on the wind, the crackle of driftwood fires, the solitude of cliffs battered by waves.
Style & Aesthetic
Their tastes are as layered as the fragrance itself-dark, complex, with a hint of rebellion. They prefer single malt whisky over cocktails, dog-eared books of philosophy and travelogues over bestsellers, the dissonant beauty of post-punk or neofolk over predictable melodies. Their wardrobe leans toward the utilitarian yet poetic: waxed jackets, well-worn boots, linen shirts that carry the memory of distant shores. They do not follow trends; they follow intuition.
Their philosophy is one of radical authenticity-they reject pretense, valuing honesty even when it is uncomfortable. They believe life should be felt deeply, not merely endured. Stoicism and romanticism war within them: they endure hardship with quiet resolve, yet their soul thrums with a longing for the sublime.
Philosophy & Values
The Explorer’s highest value is freedom-not just physical liberty, but the freedom to think, to feel, to refuse conformity. They are drawn to others who share this hunger, forming deep but transient bonds. Their relationships are intense but often fleeting, as the open road always whispers their name. They are loyal to those who understand their need for space, but they may unintentionally leave loved ones feeling abandoned in their wake.
Romantically, they are magnetic but elusive. They love passionately but resist being anchored. Their ideal partner is someone equally self-sufficient, someone who does not demand possession but instead joins them in the chase-whether across landscapes or ideas.
Shadow
Yet, the Explorer’s strength is also their flaw. Their relentless pursuit of the new can become rootlessness, a refusal to commit to anything-or anyone-long enough to truly deepen. They may mistake motion for growth, wandering endlessly without ever arriving. Beneath their bold exterior, there may lurk a fear of stagnation so profound that they flee even from happiness if it feels too settled.
At their worst, they become the Wandering Ghost, haunted by the very freedom they worship. Their independence can curdle into isolation, their thirst for experience into a hollow addiction to novelty. They may grow cynical, dismissing depth as delusion, mistaking detachment for wisdom.
Conclusion
The true challenge for the Islay lover is to learn when to wander and when to stay. The sea they adore is both tempest and calm; the peat smoke they inhale is born of both fire and earth. Their greatest evolution lies in discovering that depth is not the enemy of freedom-it is its fulfillment.
They must learn that the most profound explorations are sometimes inward.