A voluptuous and smokey fragrance, Ombre Indigo is the scent of shadow. Ombre Indigo is an enigmatic fragrance; its blend of woods and smoked resins reveals the radiant opulence of tuberose laced with saffron and melts into swirls of papyrus, incense and benzoin. A bright, deep, beguiling and flamboyant sillage. Unisex fragrance
Top Notes
Heart Notes
Base Notes
Ingredients
Petit Grain Bigarade
Tuberose Absolute
Saffron
Plum Accord
Vetiver Essence
Papyrus Essence
Leathery Notes
Incense
Benzoin Resin
Ambery Notes
Musk
Alcohol Denat.
Parfum (Fragrance)
Aqua (Water)
Alpha-Isomethyl Ionone
Limonene
Benzyl Benzoate
Eugenol
Linalool
Isoeugenol
Benzyl Alcohol
Benzyl Salicylate
Farnesol
Citral
CI 42090 (Blue 1), CI 19140 (Yellow 5), CI 14700 (Red 4, CI 17200 (Red 33)
Livraison gratuite
Echantillons gratuits*
Emballage cadeau gratuit
A shadow is a trail when you move toward light.
Shadows know all about our feelings and extend them. Without shadows, there cannot be light movements. Olfactory shadow is a shining enigma. Its darkness is radiant and lively. It develops in contrasts. Its notes reinforce their cheerful and bold outlines and unite their strengths.
Photographer
Gustavo Pellizzon
Brazilian photographer Gustavo Pellizzon was born in São Paulo in 1981. After completing studies in communication and photography, he joined the regional newspaper “O Diário do Nordeste” then “O Globo”, a national newspaper. He participated in photographic series for the UN, Le Monde, The Wall Street Journal, and the New York Magazine, among others.
Gustavo currently lives in Rio de Janeiro and devotes his time to personal photography and video projects (documentary or conceptual) while continuing to contribute to Brazilian and international magazines. The picture chosen for Ombre Indigo is part of the “Encanto” (Enchantment) series of pictures exhibited in Brazil and Europe.
Mylène Alran is a young perfumer from Albi, a town in southwest France. Mylène has always had a passion for nature and the scents surrounding her. Very early on, she pursued chemistry studies with a view to devoting herself entirely to perfume creation.
In 2010, she joined Robertet as a student perfumer under Jacques Flori. There, she quickly mastered all the formulation techniques. Thanks to her hard work and creativity, she quickly became a junior perfumer working under Michel Almairac. Together, they created Les Roses de Chloé, then, on her own, she created Azalée and Hommage à l’Homme Voyageur for Lalique.