Bouquet Des Seves Parfums De Folleville
At a glance
Is Bouquet Des Seves Parfums De Folleville worth trying?
Bouquet Des Seves by Parfums de Folleville is a Floral fragrance for women and men.
- Best match
- Evening wear in Spring
- Performance feel
- Good longevity with Moderate sillage
- Signature profile
- citrus, floral, green with Bergamot, Lotus, Longjing tea
The first impression
Bouquet Des Seves by Parfums de Folleville is a Floral fragrance for women and men. Bouquet Des Seves was launched in 2016. The nose behind this fragrance is Benjamin Belizon. Top notes are Bergamot and Lotus; middle notes are Longjing tea and Cyclamen; base notes are Orange Blossom and Vetiver.
What shapes the scent
The perfumer behind it
Benjamin Belizon
Benjamin Belizon is a perfumer with a broad portfolio spanning brands like Ajmal, Aurora Scents, and Colcci. His creations include Chapter 3, Habanera Pink, and Colcci Neon Man, showcasing his range from sophisticated to energetic scents. Belizon's work is noted for its adaptability and attention to modern trends.
Notes pyramid
The mood it creates
The Enchantress Archetype: Portrait of Bouquet Des Seves Parfums De Folleville
Essence
To wear Bouquet Des Seves Parfums De Folleville is to carry the scent of an overgrown garden-one where wild roses tangle with damp earth, where sweetness is laced with something darker, something almost decaying. This fragrance is not for those who seek clarity or simplicity; it is for the dreamer who finds beauty in the untamed, the romantic who is unafraid of shadows. The person who cherishes this scent is most closely aligned with the Enchantress archetype-a figure who weaves mystery, seduction, and transformation into the fabric of their existence.
Shadow
Yet, like all who dwell too long in the realm of enchantment, she risks becoming lost in her own illusions. Her love of mystery can slip into evasion; she may withhold truths not out of malice, but because she prefers the poetry of ambiguity. Relationships with her are intoxicating but often unstable-she draws people in with her depth, then retreats when they seek more than she is willing to give.
Her disdain for the mundane can curdle into disdain for those who live ordinary lives. She may secretly scorn the "unawakened," those who do not share her sensitivity to beauty, forgetting that not everyone has the luxury of romantic melancholy. At her worst, she becomes a prisoner of her own aesthetic, mistaking aestheticism for wisdom, mistaking solitude for superiority.
Conclusion
She moves through life with an air of quiet magnetism, drawing others in without overt effort. Her presence is not loud, but it lingers-like the perfume she wears, subtle yet impossible to ignore. She is drawn to the poetic, the melancholic, the things that others might overlook: a crumbling chapel in the countryside, a forgotten love letter in a secondhand book, the way twilight softens the edges of the world.
Her tastes are refined but never conventional. She prefers vintage silks to fast fashion, handwritten letters to text messages, candlelit dinners to bright, sterile restaurants. Her home is a sanctuary of curiosities-dried flowers under glass, antique mirrors that distort reflections just slightly, shelves lined with leather-bound books and half-empty bottles of obscure liqueurs. She is a collector of moments, not things, though the things she keeps are vessels for memory.
Philosophically, she rejects the modern obsession with productivity and efficiency. She believes in the sacredness of idleness, in the necessity of wandering without purpose. Time, to her, is not a currency to be spent, but a river to be waded through, slowly, feeling every current. She values depth over speed, intuition over logic, and beauty-even when it is flawed-over perfection.