Antelope Sweet Anthem Perfumes

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2017

At a glance

Is Antelope Sweet Anthem Perfumes worth trying?

Antelope by Sweet Anthem Perfumes is a Floral fragrance for women and men.

Best match
Casual, Office wear in Spring
Performance feel
Moderate longevity with Moderate sillage
Signature profile
rose, floral, soft spicy with Pink Pepper, Rose, Black Currant

The first impression

Antelope by Sweet Anthem Perfumes is a Floral fragrance for women and men. The nose behind this fragrance is Meredith Smith. Top note is Pink Pepper; middle notes are Rose, Black Currant and Peony; base notes are Red Tea and Palisander Rosewood.

What shapes the scent

rose 100%
floral 85%
soft spicy 70%
fresh 60%
green 50%

The perfumer behind it

Meredith Smith

Meredith Smith

Meredith Smith is the perfumer behind Sweet Anthem Perfumes, where she creates a wide range of fragrances. Her catalog includes names like Alice, Juliet, and Fox, each with a distinct character. She focuses on storytelling through scent, often drawing from literature and nature.

Notes pyramid

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Pink Pepper Pink Pepper

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Rose Rose
Black Currant Black Currant
Peony Peony

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Red Tea Red Tea
Palisander Rosewood Palisander Rosewood

The mood it creates

The Explorer Archetype: Portrait of Antelope Sweet Anthem Perfumes

Essence

Antelope embodies the Explorer archetype, a spirit drawn to the intersection of curiosity and refinement. The pink pepper's spark meets the softness of rose and peony, suggesting a journey through both wild and cultivated landscapes. Red tea and palisander rosewood in the base ground the scent in warmth, like a traveler who carries home with them.

They are drawn to the edges of experience, where floral delicacy meets earthy depth. The fragrance's balance of fresh green and soft spice mirrors their ability to navigate contrasts-equally at ease in untamed nature and polished spaces.

Style & Aesthetic

Their style is effortlessly layered, favoring organic textures and tailored silhouettes. Linen shirts, well-worn leather satchels, and botanical prints reflect their duality. They prefer muted colors with occasional bursts of rose or spice tones, echoing the fragrance's floral-spicy accord.

Spaces they inhabit blend minimalism with natural elements-dried grasses in ceramic vases, unbleached cotton drapes. Their aesthetic whispers of herbariums and sunlit libraries, where pressed flowers mark chapters of past adventures.

Philosophy & Values

They believe in movement as a form of presence, finding stillness in motion. The red tea base suggests a contemplative side-they collect insights like tea leaves unfurling in hot water. Every encounter is an opportunity to learn; every landscape, a teacher.

Rooted yet restless, they value adaptability. The black currant's tartness reminds them that growth often comes with discomfort. Their mantra might be: "Wander far enough to meet yourself anew."

Relationships

They attract fellow seekers but maintain an air of mystery, like the palisander rosewood's elusive depth. Romantic partners are drawn to their blend of warmth and independence, though some find their need for space challenging.

Friendships thrive on shared discoveries-impromptu road trips, obscure bookshops. They listen intently, offering insights as delicate as peony petals, yet grounded like the fragrance's woody base.

Lifestyle

Mornings begin with herbal tea and a notebook for recording dreams. They might work as a field researcher or freelance designer, careers allowing fluidity between observation and creation. Weekends find them foraging mushrooms or attending lectures on ethnobotany.

Their rituals honor transitions: spritzing Antelope before train rides, pressing wildflowers from each journey. Even their daily commute becomes a micro-adventure.

Shadow

Their constant exploration can mask a fear of commitment. The pink pepper's fleeting brightness sometimes prevents deeper connections. They risk becoming perpetual tourists in their own life, mistaking motion for progress.

When unbalanced, they grow impatient with routine, dismissing the ordinary as unworthy of attention-forgetting that even red tea requires steeping time.

Conclusion

Antelope is the scent of horizons both external and internal. It captures the Explorer's dance between curiosity and rootedness, much like its notes of ephemeral florals and enduring woods. To wear it is to carry a compass that points toward wonder.