Splendid Wood (le Vestiaire Des Parfums) Yves Saint Laurent
Fragrance Story
Splendid Wood (Le Vestiaire des Parfums) by Yves Saint Laurent is a Woody Spicy fragrance for women and men. Splendid Wood (Le Vestiaire des Parfums) was launched in 2017. Splendid Wood (Le Vestiaire des Parfums) was created by Marie Salamagne and Amandine Clerc-Marie. Top notes are Cardamom and Incense; middle notes are Rose and Jasmine Sambac; base notes are Agarwood (Oud), Cedar and Cypriol Oil or Nagarmotha.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Amandine Clerc-Marie
Amandine Clerc-Marie is a French perfumer who trained at Givaudan and now works as a senior perfumer at Symrise. Her style often balances fresh, transparent accords with soft floral or citrus notes, creating versatile and wearable compositions. She is known for developing Angel Schlesser Pour Elle and its flankers, as well as the fruity-floral Scent Of Kiss My Heart for Armand Basi.
Fragrance Notes
Splendid Wood (le Vestiaire Des Parfums) Yves Saint Laurent by Yves Saint Laurent 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.
Splendid Wood (le Vestiaire Des Parfums) Yves Saint Laurent embodies the distinctive style of Yves Saint Laurent while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Splendid Wood (le Vestiaire Des Parfums) Yves Saint Laurent
Essence
This person is most closely defined by the Sage-a seeker of truth, wisdom, and refined experience. The Sage thrives on knowledge, discernment, and the subtle art of living well. They are drawn to depth, to the quiet elegance of things that reveal themselves slowly, much like the fragrance they favor: Splendid Wood, a scent of warm cedar, delicate violet, and smoky vetiver-structured yet sensual, intellectual yet earthy.
The Sage does not merely consume beauty; they study it. They are the kind of person who wears fragrance not as an accessory but as a statement of inner life-a carefully chosen emblem of their philosophy.
Relationships
They do not collect friends; they cultivate them. Their relationships are few but profound, built on mutual respect and intellectual exchange. They are not the life of the party, but the one who engages in a quiet conversation in the corner, speaking in measured tones about ideas rather than gossip.
Romantically, they seek a partner who is both an equal and a mystery-someone who challenges them, who does not surrender their depths too easily. They are slow to trust but fiercely loyal once they do. Their love is not effusive but steady, like the embers of a long-burning fire.
Shadow
Yet wisdom, when unchecked, can become a prison. The Sage’s greatest flaw is their tendency to over-intellectualize, to retreat into analysis rather than engage with raw emotion. They may dismiss sentiment as weakness, or worse-view others as less enlightened. Their discernment can curdle into judgment, their love of solitude into isolation.
At their worst, they become the aloof critic, standing above life rather than living it. They may grow impatient with those who do not share their depth, forgetting that wisdom is not a possession but a process.
Conclusion
Their tastes are deliberate, shaped by an appreciation for the interplay of simplicity and complexity. They prefer literature that lingers-Nabokov, Borges, Woolf-where language is precise yet layered. In music, they gravitate toward jazz or baroque compositions, where structure and improvisation coexist. Their home is a sanctuary of clean lines, muted tones, and well-worn books-a space designed not for display but for thought.
They dress with quiet confidence, favoring tailored silhouettes, natural fabrics, and a restrained palette. Their style is not ostentatious but considered-each choice a small act of self-definition.
Philosophically, they are drawn to stoicism and existentialism, valuing self-mastery and the pursuit of meaning. Yet they are not cold rationalists; they understand that wisdom must be felt as much as known. They might meditate, journal, or walk long distances-rituals that allow them to refine their inner world.