Vetiver + Chestnut Womo
Fragrance Story
Vetiver + Chestnut by Womo is a Woody Aromatic fragrance for women and men. Vetiver + Chestnut was launched in 2017. The nose behind this fragrance is Luca Maffei. Top notes are Lemon, Bergamot, Saffron and Mace; middle notes are Pimento Seeds, Marron glace and Cypriol Oil or Nagarmotha; base notes are Haitian Vetiver, Java vetiver oil, Black Amber, Virginia Cedar and Musk.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Luca Maffei
Luca Maffei is an Italian perfumer known for his work with Acca Kappa, creating scents like Black Pepper & Sandalwood and Tilia Cordata. He also composed Amnesia Rose for Aedes de Venustas and Ambre Gris for Alyssa Ashley. Maffei's style often blends natural ingredients with modern sophistication. His portfolio includes a range of floral, woody, and aromatic compositions.
Fragrance Notes
Vetiver + Chestnut Womo by Womo 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.
Vetiver + Chestnut Womo embodies the distinctive style of Womo while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Sage Archetype: Portrait of Vetiver + Chestnut Womo
Essence
She is the Wise Crone, an archetype rooted in earthy wisdom, quiet authority, and deep intuition. Unlike the flamboyant enchantress or the nurturing mother, she embodies the kind of knowledge that comes from weathered experience-grounded, unpretentious, yet profound. Vetiver, with its smoky, root-like depth, speaks to her connection with the earth and her instinct for what endures. Chestnut, warm and subtly sweet, softens her austerity, hinting at a hidden tenderness beneath her composed exterior.
She is not one for fleeting trends or hollow charm. Her wisdom is hard-won, her presence steadying. People come to her not for comfort, but for truth-sometimes blunt, always necessary.
Philosophy & Values
She believes in substance over spectacle, in the slow accumulation of wisdom rather than the rush of revelation. Her philosophy is stoic but not cold-she accepts suffering as part of life but does not romanticize it. She has little patience for self-deception, whether in herself or others.
Her values are rooted in integrity: honesty, self-reliance, and a quiet defiance against the trivialities of modern life. She does not chase happiness but seeks meaning, often in solitude. Yet, she is not a hermit-she engages with the world, but on her own terms.
Relationships
She is selective with intimacy, not out of fear but because she understands the weight of connection. Her friendships are few but lifelong, built on mutual respect rather than neediness. She is the one who remembers birthdays, who gives books instead of trinkets, who listens more than she speaks.
In love, she is loyal but not clingy. She does not seek completion in another but values a partner who respects her autonomy. If she has children, she raises them to think, not just obey. If she is alone, it is by choice, not circumstance.
Shadow
Yet, her strength can harden into unyielding stubbornness. Her wisdom, if unchecked, can curdle into cynicism, mistaking skepticism for truth. She may dismiss what she does not understand, labeling it frivolous rather than engaging with it.
Her independence can become emotional detachment, mistaking solitude for strength. She may withhold affection not out of malice but out of habit, forgetting that even the deepest roots need water.
Conclusion
Her tastes are deliberate, refined without ostentation. She prefers muted luxury-linen over silk, aged leather over polished chrome, the patina of time over the gleam of the new. Her home is a sanctuary of textured simplicity: wooden bookshelves, dried botanicals, a single well-worn armchair by the window where she reads philosophy or old myths. She drinks black tea, not coffee, and her wine is always dry, never sweet.
She moves through life with a measured grace, neither hurried nor idle. Her career is likely one of depth over breadth-perhaps a therapist, an archivist, a gardener, or a scholar. She values mastery, not recognition. If she teaches, it is not to lecture but to guide others toward their own realizations.