Vanilla High Vivamor Parfums
Fragrance Story
Vanilla High by Vivamor Parfums is a Oriental Vanilla fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Vanilla High was launched in 2024. Vanilla High was created by Bertrand Duchaufour and Bérengère Bourgarel. Top note is Hookah; middle notes are Bourbon Vanilla and Tobacco; base notes are Smoke, Tahitian Vanilla, Tonka Bean, Praline and Woodsy Notes.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Bérengère Bourgarel
Bérengère Bourgarel is a French perfumer who has contributed to a range of niche and commercial brands. Her portfolio includes fragrances for Navitus Parfums, Vivamor Parfums, and Zlaza, often featuring gourmand and floral elements. She is recognized for creating sophisticated, versatile scents with a modern touch.
Fragrance Notes
Vanilla High Vivamor Parfums by Vivamor 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.
Vanilla High Vivamor Parfums embodies the distinctive style of Vivamor Parfums while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Nurturer Archetype: Portrait of Vanilla High Vivamor Parfums
Essence
The one who chooses Vanilla High by Vivamor Parfums is drawn to warmth, comfort, and an understated sensuality-qualities that align most closely with the Caregiver archetype. This is not the saccharine sweetness of cheap vanilla, but a sophisticated, enveloping scent that suggests both tenderness and quiet strength. The Caregiver thrives in roles where they can nurture, protect, and sustain, whether through relationships, work, or personal philosophy. Yet, like all archetypes, this one has its shadow-self-sacrifice to the point of exhaustion, a fear of being unneeded, and sometimes an unconscious expectation of reciprocity.
Style & Aesthetic
Their home is a sanctuary-soft lighting, well-worn books, a kitchen that smells of baking spices. They prefer tactile pleasures: cashmere throws, handwritten letters, the weight of ceramic mugs in their hands. Their style leans toward effortless elegance-neutral tones with occasional rich accents, like a deep burgundy scarf or a single gold bangle. They are not ostentatious, but they understand the power of subtlety.
Professionally, they gravitate toward healing or creative roles-therapists, teachers, bakers, florists-anything that allows them to channel their instinctive care into tangible form. They are the colleague who remembers birthdays, the friend who brings soup when you’re ill, the neighbor who waters your plants without being asked. Their life is built on small, meaningful gestures rather than grand declarations.
Philosophy & Values
They believe in the sacredness of the everyday. To them, love is not a dramatic force but a quiet, persistent act-showing up, listening, holding space. Their morality is not rigid but relational; they judge actions by their impact on others rather than abstract principles. They value presence over productivity, connection over conquest.
Yet, this philosophy has its limits. Their tendency to prioritize others can lead to self-neglect. They may resent those who take their kindness for granted, though they rarely voice it. Their shadow whispers: What if no one cares for me the way I care for them?
Relationships
In love, they are steadfast rather than fiery. They seek partners who appreciate depth over drama, who understand that devotion is shown in mundane acts-making coffee just right, knowing when to offer silence. Their friendships are lifelong, built on mutual nurturing. But they struggle with boundaries; their generosity can attract those who exploit it.
Their greatest fear is being abandoned once their usefulness fades. This fear sometimes makes them cling to relationships that no longer serve them, mistaking endurance for love.
Shadow
Beneath their warmth lies a quiet tension-the unspoken ledger of favors given, the exhaustion of perpetual emotional labor. If unbalanced, they may slip into martyrdom, wearing their sacrifices like armor. They might manipulate through guilt, not out of malice but from an unexamined need to feel indispensable.
Their challenge is to learn that self-care is not selfishness, that love does not require depletion. Only then can their nurturing remain pure, untainted by hidden debts.
Conclusion
Vanilla High is their essence-sweet but never cloying, comforting but never passive. It lingers in the air long after they’ve left the room, a reminder of their quiet, enduring presence. They are the ones who make the world softer, kinder. But they must remember: even the hearth needs tending, even the nurturer must be nurtured.