Karawik Siam 1928

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2023

At a glance

Is Karawik Siam 1928 worth trying?

Karawik by SIAM 1928 is a fragrance for women and men.

Best match
Casual, Evening wear in Summer
Performance feel
Good longevity with Moderate sillage
Signature profile
tropical, woody, sweet with Galbanum, Lavender, Mango

The first impression

Karawik by SIAM 1928 is a fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Karawik was launched in 2023. The nose behind this fragrance is Nutt Wesshasartar. Top notes are Galbanum and Lavender; middle notes are Mango, Coconut and Magnolia; base notes are Oakmoss, Sandalwood and Cedar.

What shapes the scent

tropical 100%
woody 85%
sweet 70%
fruity 60%
green 50%
mossy 40%
aromatic 35%
coconut 30%
floral 25%
earthy 20%

The perfumer behind it

Nutt Wesshasartar

Nutt Wesshasartar

Nutt Wesshasartar is a Thai perfumer known for his work with Azman and SIAM 1928, creating fragrances like I Am Darkness Azman and Aerapata Siam 1928. His compositions often draw on Thai cultural and natural elements, blending dark, mysterious notes with fresh, aromatic accords. He has contributed to the growth of Southeast Asian niche perfumery with a focus on storytelling and local ingredients.

Notes pyramid

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Galbanum Galbanum
Lavender Lavender

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Mango Mango
Coconut Coconut
Magnolia Magnolia

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Oakmoss Oakmoss
Sandalwood Sandalwood
Cedar Cedar

The mood it creates

The Wanderer Archetype: Portrait of Karawik Siam 1928

Essence

Karawik Siam 1928 embodies the Wanderer archetype-a soul equally at home under coconut palms or in the mossy shade of ancient forests. The mango and coconut notes sing of sun-drenched freedom, while the oakmoss and cedar root them in earthy wisdom. They move through life with barefoot grace, collecting experiences like seashells.

This fragrance captures the Wanderer's duality: the lavender and galbanum offer an aromatic crispness, like morning dew on tropical leaves, while the magnolia adds a creamy softness. They are both the journey and the destination.

Style & Aesthetic

Their wardrobe is a love letter to the places they've been-a batik sarong paired with a linen overshirt, leather sandals worn smooth by miles. They favor natural fabrics that breathe and age beautifully, much like the sandalwood note in their scent.

Their living space, whether a permanent address or a temporary nest, always feels both grounded and transient-a woven hammock strung between two trees, a collection of smooth stones from different shores arranged on a windowsill. Every object has a story.

Philosophy & Values

They believe in the sanctity of motion and the holiness of pause. The mango's sweetness alongside the coconut's richness reflects their philosophy that joy and sustenance should be one. They measure wealth in sunsets witnessed and strangers smiled at.

For them, authenticity trumps convention. Like the unapologetic greenness of galbanum, they'd rather be vividly real than politely palatable. They value instinct over itinerary, trusting that the path will appear as they walk it.

Relationships

They attract fellow nomads-whether of geography or spirit. Romantic partners must understand that their love isn't measured in proximity but in depth, like the way oakmoss retains the memory of rain long after clouds part. Their connections are intense but often intermittent.

In friendships, they're the ones who send postcards from unexpected places or show up with a bag of exotic fruit just because. The magnolia in their scent hints at their loyalty-quiet but enduring.

Lifestyle

Mornings might find them practicing yoga on a beach or sipping strong coffee at a bustling market stall. They've mastered the art of packing light, both literally and metaphorically. Each day is an open road, even if that road is just to the local library.

They collect skills like some collect possessions-knowing how to haggle in three languages, the perfect way to cut a mango, which local herb soothes mosquito bites. Their knowledge is as practical as it is poetic.

Shadow

Sometimes their freedom becomes a cage of its own making. Like the lavender that can tip from calming to cloying, they risk avoiding commitment even when it might enrich them. The challenge is to sometimes stay long enough to go deeper.

There's also a tendency to romanticize rootlessness. The very coconut that smells of paradise can also speak of impermanence-not always by choice.

Conclusion

Karawik Siam 1928 is for the Wanderer who understands that home isn't a place but a way of moving through the world. This scent is a passport to everywhere and nowhere-a reminder that sometimes the richest journeys happen between footsteps.