Room 1015
A unique visual signature based on accords, character, and seasonality
The carrot seed announces itself with surprising earthiness—faintly green, faintly sweet—whilst pink pepper delivers a sharp, clean bite that immediately establishes this as something unfamiliar. Within moments, you're not smelling "floral" but rather "botanical," grounded and slightly austere.
Jasmine arrives as a whisper rather than a statement, its creamy centre tempered entirely by orris root's powdery grey-violet presence. The spice persists, keeping everything from becoming soft; the accords balance in a tense, fascinating equilibrium where no single note dominates.
Ambroxan and cashmere wood emerge as gossamer, almost imperceptible layers. The musk dissolves seamlessly into skin, leaving behind that powdery-woody accord—less a fragrance clinging to you and more the ghost of one, intimate and introspective.
Sonic Flower inhabits that rare territory where florals refuse sentimentality and spice defies warmth. Jérôme Epinette has constructed something quietly confrontational—a fragrance that whispers rather than projects, yet demands your full olfactory attention.
The carrot seed and pink pepper opening establishes an earthy, almost root-vegetable earthiness that immediately signals this won't be a conventional floral. That carrot seed note is crucial; it brings umami-adjacent depth, a savoury undertone that prevents the jasmine-orris heart from becoming predictable. When the jasmine emerges, it's not creamy or intoxicating—it's austere, threaded through with orris root's powdery violet-iris character. The combination creates something almost botanical in its restraint, like inhaling the green dust from an old botanist's specimen box.
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4.2/5 (90)