Inedite Lubin
At a glance
Is Inedite Lubin worth trying?
Inedite by Lubin is a Oriental Spicy fragrance for women.
- Best match
- Evening, Special Occasion wear in Fall, Winter
- Performance feel
- Good longevity with Moderate sillage
- Signature profile
- powdery, vanilla, woody with Pink Pepper, Pepper, Bergamot
The first impression
Inedite by Lubin is a Oriental Spicy fragrance for women. Inedite was launched in 2009. The nose behind this fragrance is Thomas Fontaine. Top notes are Pink Pepper, Pepper, Bergamot and Mandarin Orange; middle notes are Heliotrope, Rose, Nectarine, Cinnamon, Clove, Coriander and Lilac; base notes are Vanille, Iris, Cashmere Wood, Patchouli, Musk and Virginia Cedar.
What shapes the scent
The perfumer behind it
Thomas Fontaine
Thomas Fontaine is a perfumer who has created Jasmine Yang for Anima Vinci, Cafe-cafe for Cafe Parfums, and several scents for Comptoir Sud Pacifique including Coeur D'ylang, Lime Tropical, Rhum & Tabac, and Yucatán Secret. He also composed Debut for Etienne Aigner and No 7 for Eutopie. Fontaine's work often features exotic and tropical notes, as well as gourmand and floral accords.
Notes pyramid
The mood it creates
The Alchemist Archetype: Portrait of Inedite Lubin
Essence
The Alchemist transforms base materials into gold-not literally, but through perception. Inedite Lubin embodies this metamorphosis, turning pepper and cinnamon into something luminous via heliotrope and vanilla. Like an alembic distilling contradictions, it balances spice and sweetness, powder and wood. The Alchemist knows magic isn't about defying nature but revealing its hidden harmonies.
Style & Aesthetic
Their wardrobe is a laboratory of textures: crisp white shirts under tweed vests, silk scarves knotted haphazardly. They collect curios-a vial of mercury, a 17th-century botanical engraving-displayed alongside modern art. Their aesthetic is neither vintage nor contemporary but exists outside time, like an equation that's always been true.
Philosophy & Values
They believe everything contains its opposite. A clove's bite enhances vanilla's creaminess; iris root's earthiness elevates citrus brightness. For them, life is about catalytic reactions-people, ideas, or notes that transform each other through contact. They value curiosity above certainty.
Relationships
They attract fellow experimenters. Romantic partners must tolerate their occasional absences (physical or mental) when a new obsession takes hold. Friendships thrive on shared discoveries-a forgotten jazz record, an obscure tea varietal. Their love language is giving oddly perfect gifts: a meteorite fragment, a single perfect bergamot.
Lifestyle
Their home smells of parchment, beeswax, and whatever they're currently distilling. Shelves hold apothecary jars labeled in beautiful cursive. Mornings involve calibrating the perfect coffee-to-cardamom ratio; nights are spent charting perfume formulas or the migration patterns of moths. Travel means pilgrimages to spice markets and private herbariums.
Shadow
Their experiments can become escapism. The cashmere-wood dry down risks excessive comfort-a metaphor for retreating into intellectual pursuits when emotions grow messy. Others may perceive them as detached when they're simply observing the reaction from a safe distance.
Conclusion
Inedite Lubin is the Alchemist's manifesto in liquid form. Proof that transformation isn't about erasing elements but rearranging them-until pepper becomes poetry, and vanilla vibrates with newfound depth.