Garden Of Pleasures Trnp
At a glance
Is Garden Of Pleasures Trnp worth trying?
Garden of Pleasures by TRNP is a Oriental Floral fragrance for women and men.
- Best match
- Evening, Special Occasion wear in Spring, Summer
- Performance feel
- Very Good longevity with Moderate sillage
- Signature profile
- floral, oud, woody with Champaca, Frangipani, Sandalwood
The first impression
Garden of Pleasures by TRNP is a Oriental Floral fragrance for women and men. Garden of Pleasures was launched in 2019. The nose behind this fragrance is Teone Reinthal.
What shapes the scent
The perfumer behind it
Teone Reinthal
Teone Reinthal is the perfumer behind the TRNP line, featuring scents such as Ambrosia, Anjana, Antarctica, and Arcadia. Her portfolio includes both floral and earthy themes, with names like Artemis, Audrey, Autumn Shadows, and Avant Gardenia. Reinthal’s work often explores natural and botanical accords.
Notes pyramid
The mood it creates
The Mystic Archetype: Portrait of Garden Of Pleasures Trnp
Essence
Garden of Pleasures embodies the Mystic archetype, a seeker of transcendent beauty and sensual spirituality. The fragrance's blend of champaca, frangipani, and oud creates an aura of sacred indulgence, as if one has stumbled upon a hidden temple garden where earthly and divine pleasures intertwine. They are drawn to the liminal spaces between worlds, where flowers bloom under moonlight and sandalwood whispers ancient secrets.
Style & Aesthetic
They favor flowing silks in jewel tones, garments that catch the light like lotus petals on water. Their aesthetic balances opulence with restraint-a single heavy gold bracelet, a sheer scarf dyed with indigo. Spaces they inhabit are lush but serene, with low cushions, incense burners, and bowls of floating blossoms. Every detail feels intentional, a meditation on texture and hue.
Philosophy & Values
For them, pleasure is not indulgence but a path to awakening. They believe in savoring each moment as an act of devotion, whether through the scent of white lotus or the touch of aged wood. Hedonism and asceticism are not opposites but complementary rhythms in their practice. Beauty, to them, is both ephemeral and eternal-a paradox they embrace.
Relationships
They attract those hungry for depth, yet many mistake their warmth for accessibility. Intimacy with them unfolds in layers, like the fragrance's progression from tropical florals to meditative oud. Lovers may find themselves both exalted and unnerved by their capacity to merge passion with detachment. Their closest bonds are with fellow travelers on esoteric paths.
Lifestyle
Dawn meditation gives way to afternoons blending teas or studying forgotten fragrance manuscripts. Evenings might involve hosting small gatherings where conversation spirals into metaphysics over shared plates of figs and honey. They keep odd hours, often wandering night gardens when others sleep, attuned to scents that bloom in darkness.
Shadow
Their danger lies in mistaking aesthetic transcendence for true connection. The very oud that grounds them can become an isolating obsession, a retreat from human messiness into curated beauty. At worst, they risk becoming connoisseurs of life rather than participants, admiring love's bouquet but never drinking deeply.
Conclusion
Garden of Pleasures is an invitation to worship at the altar of sensory wisdom. Like the Mystic who wears it, this fragrance suggests that paradise is not elsewhere but here-in the sacred act of smelling, touching, being. Its drydown of Indian oud and sandalwood lingers like a benediction.