Smoky Fig West Third Brand
Fragrance Story
Smoky Fig by West Third Brand is a Aromatic Green fragrance for women and men. Smoky Fig was launched during the 2010's. The nose behind this fragrance is Michael Loring Probst.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Michael Loring Probst
Michael Loring Probst is a perfumer for the West Third Brand, known for its eclectic and narrative-driven fragrances. His catalog includes 7 Heartbreaks, Amber Bound, Ambre Notti, Amerique, Antebellum, Arabesque, Band Of Outlaws, and Basilica Noir, spanning diverse themes from romance to rebellion. Probst’s work is characterized by rich, complex compositions and strong olfactory storytelling.
Fragrance Notes
Character Profile
The Sage Archetype: Portrait of Smoky Fig West Third Brand
Essence
The one who favors Smoky Fig by West Third Brand is, at their core, a Sage-an archetype defined by wisdom, introspection, and a quiet magnetism. The fragrance itself, with its balance of earthy fig, smoldering woods, and a whisper of spice, mirrors their essence: complex, layered, and subtly commanding. They are drawn to the scent not for its overt sweetness or brightness, but for its depth, its suggestion of hidden knowledge.
Yet, like all archetypes, the Sage has a shadow. Their wisdom can curdle into detachment, their introspection into self-absorption. The smoky quality of the fragrance hints at this duality-warmth and distance, illumination and obscurity.
Style & Aesthetic
Their tastes are deliberate, never accidental. They prefer the textured over the polished, the lived-in over the pristine. Their home is filled with well-worn books, dark wood furniture, and art that invites interpretation rather than immediate admiration. They might favor abstract paintings, Japanese ceramics, or mid-century design-objects that reward patience.
In fashion, they lean toward understated elegance: tailored but not stiff, rich fabrics in deep hues, perhaps a single striking accessory (a vintage watch, an heirloom ring). They avoid trends, opting instead for pieces that age with dignity.
They move through the world at their own pace. Mornings might begin with black coffee and a book; evenings with slow-cooked meals and deep conversation. They prefer small gatherings to loud parties, meaningful silences to forced chatter.
Yet this deliberate rhythm can harden into rigidity. Their shadow resists spontaneity, mistaking it for chaos. They may cling to routine as a way to ward off the unpredictability of life-and in doing so, miss its raw vitality.
Philosophy & Values
They believe in knowledge as a form of power, but not the kind that dominates-rather, the kind that liberates. They are drawn to philosophy, psychology, and the arts, always searching for the underlying patterns of human nature. Stoicism appeals to them, but so does the mysticism of Jung or the existential weight of Nietzsche.
Yet their reverence for wisdom can become a cage. They may over-intellectualize emotion, retreating into analysis when faced with vulnerability. Their shadow whispers: To understand is to control-and to control is to never be truly touched.
Relationships
They attract others effortlessly-there is something magnetic in their stillness, in the way they listen with full presence. Friends and lovers come to them for counsel, for the sense that they are truly seen.
But intimacy is their great challenge. They can be elusive, offering wisdom but not always warmth. Their partners may feel they are being studied rather than loved. Their shadow fears surrender, fearing that to lose the observer’s detachment is to lose themselves.
Conclusion
They are both luminous and obscured, like the scent they wear-warm fig wrapped in smoke. Their greatest strength is their depth; their greatest flaw, their reluctance to surface.
To know them is to walk a labyrinth: each turn reveals another layer, another question. And perhaps that is how they prefer it-always just out of reach, always leaving you wanting more.