Colle Nacarat Yzkine

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2024
Strong
Sillage
Very Good
Longevity
Fall
Best Season
Evening
Best For

Fragrance Story

Colle Nacarat by Yzkine is a fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Colle Nacarat was launched in 2024. Colle Nacarat was created by Anne-Sophie Behaghel and Margaux Le Paih Guérin. Top notes are Black Cherry and Pomegranate; middle notes are Industrial glue, Watery Notes and Almond; base notes are Ambroxan, Musk, Patchouli and Woody Notes.

Composition Profile

aquatic 100%
musky 85%
cherry 70%
woody 60%
amber 50%
industrial glue 40%
fresh 35%
fruity 30%
fresh spicy 25%
sour 20%

About the Perfumer

Anne-Sophie Behaghel

Anne-Sophie Behaghel

Anne-Sophie Behaghel is a French perfumer known for her work with independent and niche fragrance houses. Her style often blends natural and synthetic elements to create bold, textural compositions with a modern edge. She has created distinctive scents for Adi Ale Van, including the floral-powdery Hai Hui Flower Power and the earthy Mioritic, as well as the mineral-driven Sel d'Argent for BDK Parfums. Her work continues to push boundaries in contemporary perfumery.

Fragrance Notes

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Black Cherry Black Cherry
Pomegranate Pomegranate

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Industrial glue Industrial glue
Watery Notes Watery Notes
Almond Almond

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Ambroxan Ambroxan
Musk Musk
Patchouli Patchouli
Woody Notes Woody Notes

Character Profile

The Archetype Archetype: Portrait of Colle Nacarat Yzkine

Essence

To wear Colle Nacarat Yzkine is to embrace a paradox-a fragrance that is both luminous and shadowed, a scent that flickers between warmth and enigma. It is not for those who seek simplicity, nor for those who fear intensity. The person who chooses this fragrance is drawn to the interplay of light and dark, to the tension between refinement and raw instinct. Their soul is a tapestry woven from contradictions, and their life is an ongoing negotiation between control and abandon.

Above all, this person embodies The Alchemist-a seeker of transformation, a master of reinvention. Like the mythical figure turning base metals into gold, they are driven by the belief that life is not fixed, but malleable. They are not content with surface appearances; they crave depth, complexity, and the hidden meanings beneath the obvious. The Alchemist does not merely exist; they transmute experience into something richer, more potent.

This archetype fits them because Yzkine itself is an olfactory alchemy-a blend of saffron, leather, and smoky resins that defies easy categorization. It is both elegant and primal, much like the person who wears it. They are not interested in being easily understood; they prefer to be felt, to leave an impression that lingers long after they depart.

Relationships

They do not give themselves easily. Relationships are a dance of revelation and concealment, a game of measured vulnerability. They are drawn to those who can match their intellectual depth and emotional complexity, but they are wary of those who demand too much too soon. Their love is a slow-burning fire-intense but never uncontrolled.

Yet, this restraint can become their shadow. They risk becoming too guarded, mistaking detachment for strength. They may push away those who truly see them, fearing that exposure will diminish their mystery. Their partners may accuse them of emotional alchemy-turning raw feeling into something distant, abstract, untouchable.

Shadow

The Alchemist’s greatest flaw is their tendency to over-refine. Just as they distil experiences into something richer, they can also strip them of spontaneity. Life becomes an experiment, love a hypothesis, joy something to be dissected rather than simply lived. They may grow frustrated with the mundane, always seeking a deeper meaning where none is needed.

At their worst, they become the Hermit, retreating into their own mind, mistaking solitude for wisdom. They may disdain those who live simply, seeing them as unenlightened, when in truth, they envy their ability to embrace life without analysis.

Conclusion

The person who wears Colle Nacarat Yzkine is neither fully light nor fully dark-they exist in the liminal space between. They are the Alchemist, forever transforming the raw materials of existence into something more profound. But they must remember: not everything needs transmutation. Sometimes, gold is found not in the crucible, but in the unrefined moment, the unguarded laugh, the uncalculated kiss.

Will they learn to let life breathe? Or will they forever chase the elusive perfection of their own making? The answer, like their scent, lingers just beyond certainty.