Le Septieme Parfum Pauline Rochas
At a glance
Is Le Septieme Parfum Pauline Rochas worth trying?
Le Septieme Parfum by Pauline Rochas is a Chypre fragrance for women and men.
- Best match
- Evening, Special Occasion wear in Fall, Winter
- Performance feel
- Very Good longevity with Strong sillage
- Signature profile
- woody, amber, musky with Cashmere Wood, Juniper, Bergamot
The first impression
Le Septieme Parfum by Pauline Rochas is a Chypre fragrance for women and men. Le Septieme Parfum was launched in 2020. The nose behind this fragrance is Luca Maffei.
What shapes the scent
The perfumer behind it
Luca Maffei
Luca Maffei is an Italian perfumer known for his work with Acca Kappa, creating scents like Black Pepper & Sandalwood and Tilia Cordata. He also composed Amnesia Rose for Aedes de Venustas and Ambre Gris for Alyssa Ashley. Maffei's style often blends natural ingredients with modern sophistication. His portfolio includes a range of floral, woody, and aromatic compositions.
Notes pyramid
The mood it creates
The Mystic Archetype: Portrait of Le Septieme Parfum Pauline Rochas
Essence
Le Septieme Parfum embodies the Mystic archetype, a scent designed for those who seek the ineffable. Its complex blend of oud, incense, and cashmere wood creates an aura of otherworldly contemplation. Like a mystic retreating to a candlelit chamber, this fragrance doesn't announce itself - it unfolds in hushed tones, revealing its secrets only to those who linger.
Style & Aesthetic
They favor garments that whisper rather than shout: raw-edged linen tunics, silver rings etched with forgotten alphabets, scarves dyed the color of storm clouds. Their look is deliberately ambiguous, much like the fragrance's genderless composition. Fabrics are tactile but never fussy, mirroring how sandalwood and vanilla soften the incense's austerity without diminishing its power.
Philosophy & Values
They measure time in heartbeats rather than hours. The Mystic values presence above productivity, seeing the sacred in juniper's crispness and amber's slow warmth. Their beliefs are less a system than a series of questions: What does vetiver's earthiness teach about rootedness? How does bergamot's brightness reflect the nature of fleeting joy?
Relationships
They connect deeply but infrequently. Friends know to find them at dawn or twilight - the in-between hours when the fragrance's balsamic notes feel most alive. Romantic partners must appreciate solitude as they do; love, like this scent's sillage, isn't about constant proximity but the certainty of return. Their quiet intensity can intimidate, much like the oud's initial medicinal bite.
Lifestyle
Their days are punctuated by rituals: grinding coffee beans by hand to study the aroma, tracing the progress of sunlight across a particular floorboard. They might keep a notebook of dreams beside their bed or cultivate a single bonsai for decades. The Mystic doesn't distinguish between mundane and magical - patchouli's earthiness is as worthy of attention as jasmine's celestial bloom.
Shadow
The Mystic risks becoming unmoored. When unbalanced, the fragrance's woody abstraction can tip into detachment, like incense smoke dissolving before it's fully appreciated. Their challenge is to occasionally anchor themselves in the tangible - to let vanilla's sweetness or cedar's solidity remind them that wisdom must eventually touch the earth.
Conclusion
Le Septieme Parfum is for those who wear introspection like a second skin. It's not a scent for declarations but for revelations that come in the quiet moments - when oud meets skin warmth, when incense recalls a forgotten prayer, when seven notes become countless permutations under the alchemy of body heat.