Midnight Oud Ard Al Zaafaran
Fragrance Story
Midnight Oud by Ard Al Zaafaran is a Oriental Spicy fragrance for women and men. Midnight Oud was launched in 2021. Top notes are Oregano, Pimento and Bergamot; middle notes are Olibanum, Opoponax, Amber and Labdanum; base notes are Agarwood (Oud), Leather, Sandalwood and Patchouli.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Unknown Perfumer
Fragrance Notes
Midnight Oud Ard Al Zaafaran by Ard Al Zaafaran offers a distinctive olfactory experience that stands out from other fragrances in its category.
Crafted with the finest ingredients and a blend of traditional and modern perfumery techniques, this fragrance represents the pinnacle of the perfumer's art.
Midnight Oud Ard Al Zaafaran embodies the distinctive style of Ard Al Zaafaran while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Midnight Oud Ard Al Zaafaran
Essence
To wear Midnight Oud Ard Al Zaafaran is to embrace the night-not as an absence of light, but as a realm of depth, mystery, and sensuality. This fragrance, rich with smoky oud, amber, and spices, is not for those who seek the obvious. It is for the one who understands that beauty often lies in shadow, that passion thrives in the unseen.
This person is most closely aligned with the Lover archetype, though not in its superficial, romanticized form. Their love is not merely for people, but for experiences, textures, ideas-the intoxicating richness of existence itself. They are drawn to what is rare, what must be sought, what cannot be possessed easily.
Their life is a tapestry of aesthetic indulgence-dark velvet, aged leather, the flicker of candlelight on brass. They prefer the weight of history in their surroundings: antique books, Persian rugs, the scent of tobacco lingering in old wood. Their style is deliberate, not for show but for the pleasure of texture and contrast-a tailored coat over a silk shirt, a single heavy ring, the slow burn of oud on their skin.
Style & Aesthetic
They are creatures of the night, not out of rebellion, but because the world feels more alive when most are asleep. Midnight is when they write, when they wander, when they lose themselves in music that stirs something primal-jazz, classical, the deep hum of a cello.
Their home is a sanctuary, dimly lit, filled with objects that have stories. They drink whiskey neat, savor bitter chocolate, prefer the slow burn of spice over sweetness. They travel not for postcard views but for the scent of a foreign market at dusk, the weight of centuries in old stone.
Philosophy & Values
They reject the trivial, the disposable. For them, life must be felt, not just lived. They are drawn to philosophy, poetry, and art that explores the tension between ecstasy and melancholy-Rumi’s verses, Schopenhauer’s musings on desire, the paintings of Caravaggio, where light and darkness embrace violently.
Their values are rooted in authenticity-not in the modern sense of unfiltered expression, but in the older meaning: a refusal to dilute experience for the sake of comfort. They would rather suffer a truth than enjoy a lie. This makes them fiercely loyal but also demanding-they expect others to meet them at the same depth.
Relationships
They do not love lightly. Their relationships are rituals, not transactions. When they care for someone, it is with an intensity that can be overwhelming-long conversations that stretch into dawn, gifts that are not just objects but symbols, a touch that lingers like the scent of oud on skin.
Yet this depth has its shadow. Their hunger for connection can tip into possessiveness, their idealism into disappointment when others fail to match their fervor. They may retreat into solitude rather than settle for what feels shallow, leaving behind those who cannot follow them into the dark.
Shadow
The Lover’s greatest strength is also their weakness: their refusal to live half-heartedly. When unchecked, their intensity can become a prison. They may fixate on lost loves, past glories, or unattainable ideals, mistaking suffering for depth. Their disdain for the mundane can make them impatient with ordinary life, leading to restlessness or a sense of alienation.
Yet even in their flaws, there is a kind of nobility. They would rather burn out than fade, would rather ache from love than never feel it at all.
Conclusion
Midnight Oud is not just a scent-it is an extension of their soul. It lingers in rooms after they leave, a reminder that some people are not meant to be forgotten. They are the ones who make others question whether they have ever truly lived, or merely passed through existence untouched.
And perhaps that is their purpose: to remind us that life, at its richest, is not safe, not simple, but a thing to be devoured.