Ballade A Venise Roberto Capucci
At a glance
Is Ballade A Venise Roberto Capucci worth trying?
Ballade a Venise by Roberto Capucci is a Floral fragrance for women.
- Best match
- Evening wear in Spring
- Performance feel
- Good longevity with Moderate sillage
- Signature profile
- sweet, white floral, aromatic with Marigold, African Orange Flower, Mandarin Orange
The first impression
Ballade a Venise by Roberto Capucci is a Floral fragrance for women. Ballade a Venise was launched in 1996. Top notes are Marigold, African Orange Flower and Mandarin Orange; middle notes are Passionfruit, Olive Blossom, Ylang-Ylang and Jasmine; base note is Galbanum.
What shapes the scent
The perfumer behind it
Roberto Capucci
Roberto Capucci is an Italian designer and perfumer known for his artistic approach to fragrance. His compositions often evoke a sense of timeless elegance and Mediterranean inspiration. Capucci’s work reflects a balance of tradition and modernity, creating scents that feel both luxurious and approachable. His fragrances are celebrated for their ability to capture the essence of sophisticated beauty.
Notes pyramid
The mood it creates
The Ballade A Venise Enthusias Archetype: Portrait of Ballade A Venise Roberto Capucci
Essence
This person is most closely aligned with the Poet archetype-a soul who perceives life as an unfolding narrative, rich with symbolism and hidden meaning. Like the fragrance they adore-Ballade A Venise with its lush florals, powdery elegance, and dreamy, almost nostalgic sweetness-they are drawn to beauty that transcends the mundane. The Poet does not merely experience the world; they mythologize it, weaving personal and collective symbols into their daily existence.
Style & Aesthetic
Their taste is refined but never ostentatious. They favor flowing fabrics, soft textures, and colors that whisper rather than shout-dusty rose, deep ivories, muted golds. Their wardrobe is curated like a private gallery, each piece carrying emotional weight. They may wear vintage silk scarves or antique jewelry, not for status but for the stories these objects seem to hold.
Their home is an extension of this sensibility: bookshelves lined with poetry and philosophy, candles flickering in the evening, a carefully chosen painting that evokes a half-remembered dream. They are drawn to places with history-Venice, Paris, old libraries-where the past lingers like a ghost in the air.
They move through life with a quiet intensity, often lost in thought. Their career may orbit the arts-writing, design, music-or they may work in a conventional field but infuse it with their poetic sensibility. They are not driven by ambition in the traditional sense; they seek work that feels meaningful, even if it lacks prestige.
Their days are punctuated by small rituals: morning tea in a favorite cup, evening walks where they observe the play of light on cobblestones. They are drawn to twilight hours, when the world seems suspended between realms.
Philosophy & Values
For them, beauty is not superficial-it is a language, a way of understanding the world. They believe in the power of art to reveal deeper truths, and they seek meaning in the interplay of light and shadow, joy and melancholy. They are not naive romantics; they know life is often harsh. But they insist on finding grace within the chaos, like a flower growing through cracked pavement.
They value depth in relationships, preferring a few intense connections over many shallow ones. Conversations with them drift into the abstract-metaphysics, the nature of longing, the symbolism in a half-forgotten myth. They are drawn to people who see beyond surfaces, who understand that silence can sometimes speak louder than words.
Relationships
In love, they are both tender and elusive. They do not give their heart carelessly; they wait for someone who speaks their symbolic language. A lover who brings them a single, perfect peony may captivate them more than one who offers grand gestures. They crave emotional and intellectual intimacy, but they also need solitude-time to retreat into their inner world.
Their friendships are built on shared aesthetics and whispered confessions. They are the confidant who remembers your favorite line from Rilke, who gifts you a book because "it made me think of you." But they can also be frustratingly indirect, expecting others to intuit their unspoken feelings.
Shadow
The Poet’s greatest strength-their ability to see beyond the literal-can also be their downfall. They risk becoming lost in their own symbolism, mistaking aesthetic depth for lived truth. Their idealism may sour into disillusionment when reality fails to match their vision.
They can be passive, waiting for life to unfold like a beautiful story rather than taking decisive action. At worst, they retreat into fantasy, avoiding conflict or responsibility under the guise of "transcending the mundane." Their relationships may suffer if they expect others to live inside their carefully constructed mythos without compromise.
Conclusion
Ballade A Venise is their essence distilled: elegant, nostalgic, slightly mysterious. Its powdery florals reflect their romanticism, while its subtle spice hints at the complexity beneath. They wear it not to be noticed, but because it feels like a second skin-a scent that mirrors their inner world.
In the end, they are neither wholly of this world nor entirely apart from it. They walk the line between dream and reality, and their fragrance is the trail they leave behind-a whisper of something beautiful, just out of reach.