Wildflower Honey Cb I Hate Perfume
At a glance
Is Wildflower Honey Cb I Hate Perfume worth trying?
Wildflower Honey by CB I Hate Perfume is a Floral fragrance for women and men.
- Best match
- Casual wear in Spring, Summer
- Performance feel
- Good longevity with Moderate sillage
- Signature profile
- honey, floral, sweet with Honey, Floral Notes, Tobacco
The first impression
Wildflower Honey by CB I Hate Perfume is a Floral fragrance for women and men. Wildflower Honey was launched in 2009. The nose behind this fragrance is Christopher Brosius.
What shapes the scent
The perfumer behind it
Christopher Brosius
Christopher Brosius is an American perfumer and founder of CB I Hate Perfume, known for his unconventional, narrative-driven scents. His portfolio includes fragrances like 2nd Cumming, At the Beach 1966, and Beautiful Launderette, which evoke specific memories and atmospheres. He also created Cumming for actor Alan Cumming, blending personal storytelling with olfactory art.
Notes pyramid
The mood it creates
The Alchemist Archetype: Portrait of Wildflower Honey Cb I Hate Perfume
Essence
The Alchemist transforms the mundane into the magical, finding gold in sunlight and pollen. Wildflower Honey embodies this alchemy with its paradoxical blend of honey, tobacco, and soil-a scent that's both golden and shadowed. They see connections where others see contrasts, turning field weeds into elixirs.
Style & Aesthetic
Their clothes are layered like a beekeeper's veil-linen shirts over thermal layers, fingerless gloves for notebook scribbling. They favor pockets full of curiosities: beeswax lumps, rusted keys, vials of homemade tinctures. Colors echo the hive: amber, cream, the deep brown of aged mead.
Philosophy & Values
They believe in the intelligence of fermentation, the wisdom of decay. Sweetness must be tempered by earthiness to mean anything. Their spirituality is practical magic-stirring honey into tea isn't just sweetening, it's blending summer's essence with winter's need.
Relationships
They attract fellow seekers who appreciate their unconventional wisdom. Romantic partners receive hand-labeled jars of mysterious preserves. Their friendships are built on trading knowledge-how to spot edible mushrooms, which moon phase best for harvesting herbs.
Lifestyle
Their shelves bow under apothecary jars and leather-bound notebooks. Mornings involve tasting the air like wine, assessing humidity's effect on the day's alchemical work. Home smells of beeswax candles and the iron tang of tinctures steeping in dark corners.
Shadow
Their love of transformation can become escapism, forever distilling reality into something more palatable. Sometimes they forget that not all raw materials need improving-some truths are best left unstrained.
Conclusion
Wildflower Honey is the scent of sunlight transmuted through a million wingbeats, proof that magic works through patient accumulation. It reminds us that even the sweetest things must root themselves in dirt.