Frangipani One Seed

For Women
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2009

At a glance

Is Frangipani One Seed worth trying?

Frangipani by One Seed is a Floral fragrance for women.

Best match
Evening, Special Occasion wear in Spring
Performance feel
Good longevity with Moderate sillage
Signature profile
floral, white floral, citrus with Orange Blossom, Clementine, Bergamot

The first impression

Frangipani by One Seed is a Floral fragrance for women. Frangipani was launched in 2009. The nose behind this fragrance is Liz Cook. Top notes are Orange Blossom, Clementine, Bergamot and Champaca; middle notes are Frangipani, Honey, Rose, Gardenia, Apricot and Jasmine; base notes are Sandalwood, Ambrette (Musk Mallow), Benzoin and Black Currant.

What shapes the scent

floral 100%
white floral 85%
citrus 70%
fruity 60%
sweet 50%
woody 40%
lactonic 35%
honey 30%
amber 25%
rose 20%

The perfumer behind it

Liz Cook

Liz Cook

Liz Cook is the perfumer for One Seed, where she has created a collection of fragrances including Bohemia, Courage, Devotion, Dreamer, Field, Frangipani, Freedom, and Grace. Her work focuses on natural and organic ingredients, with each scent designed to evoke a specific mood or memory. Cook's fragrances are known for their purity and emotional resonance.

Notes pyramid

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Orange Blossom Orange Blossom
Clementine Clementine
Bergamot Bergamot
Champaca Champaca

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Frangipani Frangipani
Honey Honey
Rose Rose
Gardenia Gardenia
Apricot Apricot
Jasmine Jasmine

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Sandalwood Sandalwood
Ambrette (Musk Mallow) Ambrette (Musk Mallow)
Benzoin Benzoin
Black Currant Black Currant

The mood it creates

The Muse Archetype: Portrait of Frangipani One Seed

Essence

Frangipani One Seed embodies the Muse archetype, a fragrance that inspires and intoxicates. The frangipani and orange blossom swirl like a painter's brushstroke, luminous and fleeting. This is a scent for those who live between dream and reality, turning the mundane into art.

The honeyed apricot and jasmine suggest a sweetness that isn't naive-it's deliberate, a choice to find radiance even in shadows. The sandalwood base provides just enough gravity to keep them from floating away entirely.

Style & Aesthetic

They wear flowing dresses that catch the wind, their pockets full of dried petals and charcoal pencils. Their hair is perpetually tousled, as if they've just woken from a vivid dream. Their studio is cluttered with half-finished canvases and tinctures of forgotten flowers.

They favor pearls over diamonds, valuing luster over flash. The fragrance's lactonic quality clings to their favorite cashmere wrap, soft as a sigh.

Philosophy & Values

They believe beauty is an act of resistance. The champaca's exoticism reflects their disdain for boundaries, while the bergamot's brightness fuels their idealism. They collect folk tales and lunar phases, seeing patterns where others see chaos.

The benzoin's resinous depth reveals their understanding that creation requires both ecstasy and sacrifice. They worship at the crossroads of discipline and abandon.

Relationships

They are the secret heartbeat of every gathering, the one who remembers birthdays and brings the perfect book to a sickbed. Lovers find them endlessly surprising-one day offering black currant's tartness, the next sandalwood's serenity.

Their friendships are constellations, connecting souls who'd otherwise drift alone. The ambrette's musky whisper makes confessions spill effortlessly in their presence.

Lifestyle

They rise late but work feverishly, burning midnight oil alongside jasmine-scented candles. They might be a poet or a perfumer, someone who translates emotions into form. Their rituals include pressing flowers into dictionaries or brewing tea from petals.

Markets delight them-bargaining for bergamots or pocketing a sprig of stolen rosemary. The fragrance's fruity facets reflect their hunger for sensory abundance.

Shadow

Their receptivity can become passivity, the honey's stickiness trapping them in others' visions. They may fear their own voice, letting the gardenia's grandeur overshadow their quieter notes.

The black currant's sharpness warns against bitterness when the world fails to match their ideals. Yet the musk mallow's softness suggests an inner resilience.

Conclusion

Frangipani One Seed is the scent of a moonlit balcony-a space where reality blurs and anything feels possible. It captures the Muse's gift: to make others believe in magic again, if only for the duration of a breath.