Odyssey Ponsa

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2022

At a glance

Is Odyssey Ponsa worth trying?

Odyssey by Ponsa is a Woody Aromatic fragrance for women and men.

Best match
Casual wear in Spring, Summer
Performance feel
Moderate longevity with Moderate sillage
Signature profile
aromatic, fresh spicy, woody with Lemon, Fig Leaf, Tomato Leaf

The first impression

Odyssey by Ponsa is a Woody Aromatic fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Odyssey was launched in 2022. The nose behind this fragrance is Alejandro Ponsà. Top notes are Lemon, Fig Leaf and Tomato Leaf; middle notes are Myrtle, Rosemary, Thyme and Lavender; base notes are Pine, Cypress and Labdanum.

What shapes the scent

aromatic 100%
fresh spicy 85%
woody 70%
green 60%
citrus 50%
herbal 40%

The perfumer behind it

Alejandro Ponsà

Alejandro Ponsà

Alejandro Ponsà is a Spanish perfumer known for his work with independent fragrance houses. His style often blends natural and synthetic elements to create bold, atmospheric compositions. Notable creations include the woody depth of Cedar Forest Ponsa and the tropical richness of Cuban Mango Ahlea.

Notes pyramid

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Lemon Lemon
Fig Leaf Fig Leaf
Tomato Leaf Tomato Leaf

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Myrtle Myrtle
Rosemary Rosemary
Thyme Thyme
Lavender Lavender

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Pine Pine
Cypress Cypress
Labdanum Labdanum

The mood it creates

The Explorer Archetype: Portrait of Odyssey Ponsa

Essence

Odyssey embodies the Explorer archetype, a fragrance of restless curiosity and earthy vitality. Its opening notes of lemon and fig leaf evoke sun-drenched Mediterranean landscapes, while the tomato leaf adds an unexpected green tang - much like the Explorer's love for roads less traveled. The herbal heart of rosemary and thyme speaks to resilience and adaptability.

This is a scent for movement, its pine and cypress base providing the sturdy foundation of someone who wanders but isn't lost. The labdanum adds a resinous depth, hinting at the wisdom gained through miles rather than years.

Style & Aesthetic

They favor practical clothing with a touch of the unconventional - hiking boots paired with an antique compass necklace, or a well-worn leather jacket over a technical base layer. Their look says they're equally prepared for a mountain trail or a back-alley jazz club.

Their home, if they have one, is filled with maps and found objects - a piece of volcanic rock from Iceland, a hand-carved bowl from Morocco. The fig leaf's earthiness reflects their connection to place without possession.

Philosophy & Values

They believe in experience as the truest form of knowledge, in getting lost as the best way to find oneself. The lemon's brightness represents their optimism, their faith that the next horizon always holds promise.

For them, boundaries are made to be crossed - whether geographic, social, or personal. The thyme's hardiness reflects their respect for those who thrive in harsh conditions, their understanding that comfort isn't the same as happiness.

Relationships

They're the friend who sends postcards from unexpected places, whose stories make you see your own city with new eyes. Their relationships are intense but often transient, the lavender in the heart note blooming beautifully but briefly.

Romantically, they struggle between craving connection and fearing confinement. The tomato leaf's green bitterness hints at their occasional emotional guardedness, their fear that roots might clip their wings.

Lifestyle

Their days begin early, with strong coffee and a scan of the weather wherever they are. They keep a journal but rarely in chronological order - sketches of street scenes share pages with grocery lists and half-formed ideas.

They know how to pack for any climate in under ten minutes. The pine's crispness reflects their preference for mornings over nights, for beginnings over endings.

Shadow

Their greatest trap is rootlessness, mistaking motion for progress. The cypress's melancholy warns of the loneliness that comes with constant departure.

When unbalanced, they become selfish, treating people as scenery. The rosemary's sharpness reminds us that even the freest spirit has responsibilities to those they leave behind.

Conclusion

Odyssey is the scent of the open road, for those who measure life in sunrises seen and borders crossed rather than years accumulated. It captures the Explorer's journey from restless seeking to the realization that sometimes, the greatest adventures are internal.