Dies Irae (verdi) Perfume Oil Possets Perfume

Unisex
Perfume Oil
Year: 2014

At a glance

Is Dies Irae (verdi) Perfume Oil Possets Perfume worth trying?

Dies Irae (Verdi) Perfume Oil by Possets Perfume is a Oriental fragrance for women and men.

Best match
Evening, Special Occasion wear in Fall, Winter
Performance feel
Very Good longevity with Strong sillage
Signature profile
amber, earthy, balsamic with Black Musk, Musk, Galbanum

The first impression

Dies Irae (Verdi) Perfume Oil by Possets Perfume is a Oriental fragrance for women and men. Dies Irae (Verdi) Perfume Oil was launched in 2014. The nose behind this fragrance is Fabienne Christenson.

What shapes the scent

amber 100%
earthy 85%
balsamic 70%
fresh spicy 60%
floral 50%
powdery 40%
green 35%
iris 30%
musky 25%
oud 20%

The perfumer behind it

Fabienne Christenson

Fabienne Christenson

Fabienne Christenson is the founder and perfumer behind Possets Perfume, an independent brand known for its artistic and narrative-driven fragrances. Her catalog includes evocative names like Allen Ginsberg Howl, Madame X, and Gingerbread Whorehouse, often blending gourmand, floral, and resinous elements. Christenson's creations are celebrated for their originality and emotional resonance.

Notes pyramid

All Notes

Complete scent profile

Black Musk Black Musk
Musk Musk
Galbanum Galbanum
Hawthorn Hawthorn
Earthy Notes Earthy Notes
Orris Root Orris Root
Agarwood (Oud) Agarwood (Oud)
Incense Incense
Olibanum Olibanum
Black Amber Black Amber

The mood it creates

The Mystic Archetype: Portrait of Dies Irae (verdi) Perfume Oil Possets Perfume

Essence

The Mystic dwells in sacred shadows, and Dies Irae moves like incense in a dim chapel. Black musk and oud form its devotional heart, while galbanum and hawthorn lend an earthy mysticism. This is a fragrance for those who seek truth in the spaces between light and dark, where the divine whispers through cracked stone.

They are the keepers of thresholds, comfortable with paradox. The floral lift of orris root against funereal amber mirrors their ability to hold joy and sorrow as one. Time bends around them-ancient as olibanum, immediate as fresh-turned soil.

Style & Aesthetic

Their wardrobe favors flowing lines and textures that catch the light oddly-raw silk that looks like tarnished silver, or linen dyed with iron-rich earth. Jewelry is minimal but significant: a single thumb ring, perhaps, or a pendant too old to identify.

Spaces they inhabit feel both sparse and dense. A single candle illuminates stacks of leather-bound books; dried herbs hang beside modernist sculptures. Every object seems chosen to anchor some intangible quality, like relics in a reliquary.

Philosophy & Values

The Mystic believes in the holiness of the ordinary. A cup of tea can be a sacrament, a walk through the city a pilgrimage. They reject the dichotomy of sacred and profane-for them, the black amber of Dies Irae is as divine as any cathedral incense.

They value intuition over doctrine, experience over explanation. Ritual structures their days, but these are personal and mutable-more about presence than repetition. Silence is their native language; words are merely fingers pointing at the moon.

Relationships

They attract seekers and skeptics alike, though few stay long enough to unravel their contradictions. Romantic partners must accept that some chambers of their heart will always be veiled-not out of secrecy, but because some truths cannot be spoken.

Their friendships are deep but intermittent, like stars appearing between clouds. They teach without preaching, often through simple questions that unravel assumptions. Yet they themselves remain slightly out of focus, more felt than known.

Lifestyle

Dawn and dusk are their sacred hours. Mornings might find them practicing tai chi in dew-wet grass, evenings journaling by a single lamp. They move through cities like a monk through a marketplace-present but detached, collecting impressions like alms.

Travel is pilgrimage, whether to ancient sites or industrial ruins. A small satchel holds essentials: a notebook, a vial of this perfume, maybe a stone picked up from some forgotten roadside. They need little, but what they have is charged with meaning.

Shadow

Their depth can become escapism, their spirituality a way to avoid earthly responsibilities. The very richness of their inner world may starve their outer connections. At worst, they grow morbidly fascinated with their own darkness, mistaking obscurity for wisdom.

They risk becoming ghosts in their own lives-so attuned to the numinous that the mundane withers. Even their perfume, so beautiful, could become a shield against real engagement.

Conclusion

Dies Irae is the Mystic embodied-a fragrance that breathes with sacred gravity. Like the oud and amber at its core, this archetype reminds us that the most profound truths often dwell in the liminal, the in-between. They are the quiet guides, showing us how to kneel in the dirt and touch the divine.