Tomato Leaf Great American Scents
At a glance
Is Tomato Leaf Great American Scents worth trying?
Tomato Leaf by Great American Scents is a Aromatic Green fragrance for women and men.
- Best match
- Casual wear in Spring
- Performance feel
- Moderate longevity with Moderate sillage
- Signature profile
- green, aromatic, citrus with Verbena, Rhubarb, Tomato
The first impression
Tomato Leaf by Great American Scents is a Aromatic Green fragrance for women and men. Tomato Leaf was launched in 2013. Top notes are Verbena, Rhubarb and Tomato; middle notes are Green Leaves and Olive Blossom; base notes are Oakmoss and Guaiac Wood.
What shapes the scent
The perfumer behind it
Great American Scents
Great American Scents focuses on capturing the essence of familiar, nostalgic aromas with a fresh perspective. Their Tomato Leaf fragrance highlights a commitment to realistic, nature-inspired accords. The brand's approach is straightforward yet inventive, celebrating everyday scents in unexpected ways. Great American Scents resonates with those who appreciate simplicity with a twist.
Notes pyramid
The mood it creates
The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Tomato Leaf Great American Scents
Essence
At their core, this person embodies the Innocent archetype-a soul drawn to purity, simplicity, and the unspoiled beauty of nature. The scent of tomato leaf is not merely a fragrance to them; it is an olfactory hymn to sun-warmed gardens, childhood summers, and the quiet joy of tending to living things. They are nostalgic yet forward-looking, grounded yet dreamy, finding solace in the tangible and the ephemeral.
But innocence is not naivety. Their love for this scent reveals a deeper philosophy: life should be savored, uncomplicated, and free from artifice. They reject the synthetic in favor of the organic, the hurried in favor of the deliberate. Yet, like all Innocents, they risk disillusionment when reality fails to match their verdant ideals.
Style & Aesthetic
Their preferences are earthy yet refined-farmers' markets over supermarkets, hand-thrown pottery over mass-produced dishware, linen over polyester. They might grow their own herbs, not out of necessity, but for the pleasure of crushing basil between their fingers or inhaling the sharp greenness of rosemary. Their home is airy, filled with natural light and the faint scent of drying lavender.
In food, they favor bright, acidic flavors-tomatoes still warm from the vine, citrus zest, olive oil drizzled over crusty bread. Their palate mirrors their personality: unpretentious, vibrant, and deeply connected to the seasons.
They dress for comfort, not trends-linen shirts, well-worn denim, leather sandals that have molded to their feet. Their wardrobe is a muted palette of greens, browns, and creams, as if they are an extension of the landscape they love. They wear little jewelry, perhaps a single silver ring or a woven bracelet, something with history.
Their movements are unhurried, their voice measured. When they speak, it is with a quiet conviction, as if each word has been weighed for sincerity.