Abed Anomalia Paris
At a glance
Is Abed Anomalia Paris worth trying?
Abed by Anomalia Paris is a fragrance for women and men.
- Best match
- Evening wear in Fall
- Performance feel
- Very Good longevity with Strong sillage
- Signature profile
- white floral, vanilla, mineral with Mineral notes, Iodine, Ceylon Cinnamon
The first impression
Abed by Anomalia Paris is a fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Abed was launched in 2022. The nose behind this fragrance is Ane Ayo. Top notes are Mineral notes, Iodine and Ceylon Cinnamon; middle notes are Tiare Flower, Tuberose and Jasmine Sambac; base notes are Vanilla, Peru Balsam and Myrrh.
What shapes the scent
The perfumer behind it
Ane Ayo
Ane Ayo is a Spanish perfumer known for her work with brands like Angel Schlesser, Bentley, and Chloé. Her style often balances luminous florals with fresh, modern accords, as seen in creations such as Chloé L'Eau de Parfum Lumineuse and Joyful Nashi Bloom. She also explores deeper, more complex compositions, exemplified by Bentley Momentum Unbreakable and Bilbao for Contes de Parfums.
Notes pyramid
The mood it creates
The Alchemist Archetype: Portrait of Abed Anomalia Paris
Essence
The person who chooses Abed Anomalia Paris as their signature scent is, at their core, an Alchemist-a seeker of transformation, a weaver of mystery, and a connoisseur of the rare and unconventional. This fragrance, with its dark, smoky, and resinous depth, speaks to someone who thrives in the liminal spaces between the known and the unknown. They are not content with the mundane; they crave the alchemical process of turning the ordinary into the extraordinary.
Like the alchemists of old, they are drawn to the hidden meanings in life, the subtle shifts in perception, the way a scent can evoke memory, longing, or even prophecy. They are both artist and philosopher, blending intuition with intellect, always searching for the deeper resonance beneath the surface.
Shadow
Their greatest strength is their ability to transform-themselves, their surroundings, even the people they touch. They have an instinct for the sublime, an eye for beauty in decay, and a talent for drawing meaning from chaos. They are not afraid of darkness because they know it is where the most potent transmutations occur.
Yet their shadow is the danger of becoming too enamored with their own mystique. The Alchemist risks slipping into self-mythology, crafting an identity so layered that even they lose sight of what is real. They may withdraw too far, mistaking solitude for wisdom, isolation for enlightenment. Their pursuit of the extraordinary can blind them to the quiet beauty of the ordinary-the warmth of simple laughter, the comfort of routine.
At their worst, they become the Charlatan-a manipulator of perceptions, using their allure to obscure rather than reveal. They may grow cynical, dismissing those who do not share their depth as shallow, forgetting that not everyone needs to wander the labyrinth to live fully.
Conclusion
Their tastes are eclectic, leaning toward the avant-garde yet never without purpose. They might wear tailored black with a single, striking piece of antique jewelry-something that hints at history, at secrets. Their home is a curated sanctuary: dim lighting, rich textures, perhaps an old apothecary cabinet filled with curiosities. Books on mysticism, art monographs, and obscure vinyl records are scattered with deliberate care.
Philosophically, they reject dogma but embrace paradox. They believe in the fluidity of identity, the power of reinvention, yet they are anchored by an unshakable sense of self. They value authenticity but understand that authenticity is not static-it is something forged through experience, like gold refined in fire.
In relationships, they are magnetic but elusive. They draw people in with their intensity, their ability to see beyond facades, but they guard their own depths carefully. They are not cruel, but they are selective-intimacy is a privilege, not a given. Their closest bonds are with those who respect their need for solitude, who understand that silence between them is not absence but a form of communion.