Autumn Harvest Burren Perfumery

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: Unknown

At a glance

Is Autumn Harvest Burren Perfumery worth trying?

Autumn Harvest by Burren Perfumery is a fragrance for women and men.

Best match
Casual wear in Fall
Performance feel
Good longevity with Moderate sillage
Signature profile
fruity, green, aromatic with Blackcurrant, Blackberry leaf, Nettle

The first impression

Autumn Harvest by Burren Perfumery is a fragrance for women and men. The nose behind this fragrance is Sylvie Jourdet.

What shapes the scent

fruity 100%
green 85%
aromatic 70%
woody 60%

The perfumer behind it

Sylvie Jourdet

Sylvie Jourdet

Sylvie Jourdet is a perfumer known for her work with Burren Perfumery, where she crafted seasonal scents like Autumn Harvest, Spring Harvest, and Winter Woods. Her compositions often reflect natural cycles and landscapes, with a focus on earthy, botanical notes. Jourdet also created fragrances for By Bobo and Dear Diary, showcasing her range from gourmand to aquatic themes.

Notes pyramid

All Notes

Complete scent profile

Blackcurrant Blackcurrant
Blackberry leaf Blackberry leaf
Nettle Nettle
Blackberry Blackberry
Woody Notes Woody Notes
Marjoram Marjoram

The mood it creates

The Sage Archetype: Portrait of Autumn Harvest Burren Perfumery

Essence

This person is most closely aligned with the Sage-a seeker of wisdom, drawn to the quiet introspection of nature and the layered meanings hidden beneath the surface. The scent of Autumn Harvest by Burren Perfumery, with its earthy warmth, crisp spice, and lingering melancholy, mirrors their essence: a mind that thrives in the liminal space between knowledge and mystery.

Style & Aesthetic

Their wardrobe is a muted tapestry of wool, linen, and leather-textures that age gracefully. Earth tones dominate, but never predictably; a deep burgundy or moss green might surface, echoing the unpredictability of autumn itself. They favor handmade jewelry, perhaps a silver ring with an engraved rune or a pendant of amber holding some ancient secret.

Their home is a sanctuary of books, dried botanicals, and well-worn leather chairs. Candles flicker in the evenings, casting shadows that dance like the last leaves clinging to branches. Music is often instrumental-folk melodies, minimalist piano, or the deep hum of a cello-anything that allows the mind to wander.

Mornings begin slowly-black coffee, a journal, the deliberate turning of pages. They prefer walks in the woods to crowded streets, finding solace in the crunch of leaves underfoot. Their work, whether creative or analytical, demands solitude; they thrive in roles that allow them to delve deeply-writers, researchers, herbalists, or historians.

They are not ascetics, though. They savor good wine, the richness of slow-cooked meals, the pleasure of a well-blended perfume. But excess disturbs them; they seek balance, always aware of the fine line between indulgence and gluttony.

Philosophy & Values

They are a contemplative soul, viewing life as an unfolding text to be read slowly, not devoured. The scent of damp leaves, woodsmoke, and dried herbs in their fragrance speaks to their reverence for cycles-birth, decay, rebirth. They believe wisdom is not found in loud declarations but in the silent observation of patterns: the way light shifts in October, the way people reveal themselves in unguarded moments.

Yet, their love for autumn is not mere nostalgia; it is a philosophy. They see beauty in impermanence, strength in vulnerability. Their values are rooted in authenticity-they despise pretense, preferring raw honesty even when it unsettles. They are drawn to thinkers like Nietzsche not for his bombast but for his unflinching gaze into the abyss of human nature.

Relationships

They are not a social butterfly, but neither are they a recluse. Their friendships are few but profound, built on mutual respect for depth rather than surface charm. They listen more than they speak, and when they do speak, their words carry weight. Romantic partners are drawn to their quiet intensity, though some may grow frustrated by their occasional emotional withdrawal.

In love, they are loyal but guarded. They fear the loss of autonomy, sometimes mistaking intimacy for confinement. Their shadow emerges here: a tendency to intellectualize emotions, retreating into analysis rather than vulnerability. They must learn that wisdom without warmth is merely cleverness in disguise.

Shadow

The Sage’s greatest strength-their introspection-can become their prison. When overdeveloped, their love for solitude turns into detachment, their wisdom into cynicism. They may dismiss others as shallow, forgetting that depth is not the sole measure of worth. Their reluctance to engage emotionally can leave them stranded in their own mind, a spectator rather than a participant in life.

To grow, they must learn that wisdom is not only found in silence-sometimes it is in the messy, unpredictable exchange of human connection. The scent of Autumn Harvest reminds them that decay is necessary for rebirth; perhaps they, too, must let parts of themselves wither to make room for new growth.

Conclusion

This person is neither entirely of the world nor entirely apart from it. They walk the borderlands, gathering wisdom like fallen leaves, knowing that nothing lasts-and that is precisely what makes it beautiful. Their fragrance is their manifesto: life is fleeting, but in its transience lies its deepest meaning.