Mirage Du Desert 100 Bon

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2018

At a glance

Is Mirage Du Desert 100 Bon worth trying?

Mirage du Desert by 100 Bon is a Woody Spicy fragrance for women and men.

Best match
Evening wear in Fall, Winter
Performance feel
Good longevity with Moderate sillage
Signature profile
woody, warm spicy, powdery with Cardamom, Carrot Seeds, Fig

The first impression

Mirage du Desert by 100 Bon is a Woody Spicy fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Mirage du Desert was launched in 2018. The nose behind this fragrance is Serge de Oliveira. Top notes are Cardamom, Carrot Seeds and Fig; middle notes are Sandalwood, Iris, Frankincense and Papyrus; base notes are Vetiver, Cedar, Amberwood and Musk.

What shapes the scent

woody 100%
warm spicy 85%
powdery 70%
aromatic 60%
amber 50%

The perfumer behind it

Serge de Oliveira

Serge de Oliveira

Serge de Oliveira is a perfumer known for creating a diverse range of fragrances for the 100 Bon brand. His compositions include Ambre Sensuel, Davana & Vanille, and Eau De Thé & Gingembre, among others. His work often explores warm, spicy, and aromatic accords, appealing to a broad audience.

Notes pyramid

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Cardamom Cardamom
Carrot Seeds Carrot Seeds
Fig Fig

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Sandalwood Sandalwood
Iris Iris
Frankincense Frankincense
Papyrus Papyrus

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Vetiver Vetiver
Cedar Cedar
Amberwood Amberwood
Musk Musk

The mood it creates

The Wanderer Archetype: Portrait of Mirage Du Desert 100 Bon

Essence

Mirage du Desert embodies the Wanderer archetype, finding clarity in vast emptiness. The fragrance's arid cardamom and fig opening gives way to the cool relief of papyrus and frankincense-a perfect metaphor for their journey between mirage and oasis. They are drawn to spaces that strip away pretense.

This scent captures their paradoxical nature: grounded yet transient, solitary yet deeply connected to landscapes. The vetiver-cedar base suggests they carry home within themselves, even as they traverse unfamiliar terrain.

Style & Aesthetic

Their style is utilitarian elegance-a well-cut duster coat over boots made for walking. Fabrics are natural and forgiving; colors echo desert tones: bleached linens, faded indigos, the occasional saffron accent. Everything must serve multiple purposes or tell a story.

Their living space, whether nomadic or fixed, is spare but intentional. A single perfect stone might serve as paperweight, meditation anchor, and conversation piece. Walls display maps or abstract line drawings that suggest routes not taken.

Philosophy & Values

They believe in the wisdom of displacement-that we understand ourselves best when removed from familiar contexts. For them, stillness is found in motion, like the eye of a sandstorm. They value adaptability but resist rootlessness for its own sake.

Their ethic is one of light passage: take only what nourishes, leave only what inspires. They see thresholds as sacred and treat each crossing as a minor rebirth.

Relationships

They form deep but episodic connections, appearing unexpectedly with stories and small treasures from their travels. Friends know not to ask for their address but can always find them in letters or at certain crossroads when needed.

Romantic partners must understand that their love isn't measured in proximity. They express devotion through shared silences and the perfect gift found months earlier on another continent.

Lifestyle

Their days are structured around movement-whether a morning walk that becomes a ten-mile detour or an afternoon spent tracing new routes through familiar cities. They keep a kit ready for sudden departures but are equally content watching light shift across a room.

Work often involves bridging worlds: translating between cultures, guiding others through transitions, or creating art that captures liminal spaces. They measure wealth in freedom and stories.

Shadow

Their shadow emerges when wandering becomes avoidance. They may mistake solitude for independence or confuse new horizons with progress. At worst, they become spectral-present everywhere but substantial nowhere.

The challenge is to occasionally stay long enough to be changed by a place rather than just changing it.

Conclusion

Mirage du Desert is the scent of horizons both real and imagined. Like the Wanderer who finds truth in shifting sands, this fragrance reveals how what appears empty is often rich with meaning-if one knows how to travel lightly enough to perceive it.