To My Father Vilhelm Parfumerie
Fragrance Story
To My Father by Vilhelm Parfumerie is a Leather fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. To My Father was launched in 2022. The nose behind this fragrance is Bertrand Duchaufour. Top notes are Bitter Orange, Ambrette (Musk Mallow) and Davana; middle notes are Whiskey, Cade oil and Cabreuva; base notes are Oak Tree and Leather.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Bertrand Duchaufour
Bertrand Duchaufour is a renowned French perfumer with a prolific career spanning many brands. He has created fragrances for Acqua di Parma, including Blu Mediterraneo - Cipresso Di Toscana and Colonia Assoluta, as well as for Aedes de Venustas, such as Café Tabac and Copal Azur. His style is known for its complexity and use of natural ingredients.
Fragrance Notes
To My Father Vilhelm Parfumerie by Vilhelm Parfumerie 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.
To My Father Vilhelm Parfumerie embodies the distinctive style of Vilhelm Parfumerie while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Sage Archetype: Portrait of To My Father Vilhelm Parfumerie
Essence
To wear To My Father by Vilhelm Parfumerie is to carry the weight of memory, wisdom, and quiet authority. This fragrance-a blend of smoky vetiver, warm amber, and the faintest whisper of leather-speaks of a person who values depth over dazzle, substance over spectacle. They are drawn to the scent not for its trendiness but for its timelessness, its ability to evoke both intellect and intimacy.
This person is, above all, a seeker of knowledge-not merely facts, but the kind of understanding that shapes character. The Sage archetype defines them, for they are the one others turn to for counsel, the one who listens with patience and responds with precision. They are not a mere collector of information but a distiller of wisdom, someone who sifts through life’s complexities to find the essential truths.
Yet the Sage is not without shadows. Their pursuit of understanding can become a retreat from feeling, their analytical mind a fortress against vulnerability. They may mistake detachment for objectivity, distance for wisdom.
Relationships
They are not the life of the party, but the one standing slightly apart, observing, absorbing. People confide in them effortlessly, sensing a listener who will not judge but will also not flatter. Their friendships are few but enduring, built on mutual respect rather than need.
Romance, for them, is a slow burn. They are wary of grand gestures, preferring the quiet accumulation of shared moments. Their love is expressed in gestures-a book left open on a favorite passage, a single candle lit at dinner. Yet their reluctance to surrender control can make them seem distant, their rationality a barrier to passion.
Shadow
Their greatest strength-their intellect-can also be their prison. They may mistake understanding for resolution, believing that to analyze a feeling is to transcend it. Their detachment, once a shield, can become a cage, leaving them isolated in their own mind.
At their worst, they may grow impatient with those who do not share their rigor, dismissing emotion as irrationality. They may hoard knowledge as a miser hoards gold, forgetting that wisdom is meant to be shared, not stored.
Conclusion
Their tastes are refined but never ostentatious. They prefer the weight of a well-bound book to the flicker of a screen, the texture of aged paper to the glare of digital light. Their home is a sanctuary of order-not sterile, but deliberate, each object chosen for its meaning as much as its function. A vintage typewriter sits on a wooden desk, not as decoration, but as a tool they still use for letters they deem worthy of permanence.
They dress with quiet intention: tailored but not stiff, fabrics that age gracefully, colors that suggest depth rather than demand attention. A well-worn leather satchel, a watch with a face worn smooth by time-these are their companions, not accessories but extensions of self.
Philosophy is not an abstract exercise for them but a lived discipline. They are drawn to Stoicism for its emphasis on self-mastery, to existentialism for its insistence on meaning as a personal creation. They do not preach these ideas but embody them, believing that wisdom is useless if it does not shape action.