Oud In Chiaroscuro: Oudh Noir Dsh Perfumes

Unisex
Parfum/Extrait
Year: 2018
Strong
Sillage
Excellent
Longevity
Fall
Best Season
Evening
Best For

Fragrance Story

Oud in Chiaroscuro: Oudh Noir by DSH Perfumes is a fragrance for women and men. Oud in Chiaroscuro: Oudh Noir was launched in 2018. The nose behind this fragrance is Dawn Spencer Hurwitz.

Composition Profile

oud 100%
smoky 85%
leather 70%
animalic 60%

About the Perfumer

Dawn Spencer Hurwitz

Dawn Spencer Hurwitz

Dawn Spencer Hurwitz is the founder and perfumer of DSH Perfumes, with a catalog spanning over 30 years of work. Her creations include 1,000 Lilies, Acqua Di Venezia, and Amber, as well as the American Perfumer series like Colorado. Hurwitz is known for her classical approach, often drawing on historical and geographical inspirations.

Fragrance Notes

All Notes

Complete scent profile

Agarwood (Oud) Agarwood (Oud)
Leather Leather
Smoke Smoke
Rubber Rubber
Unique Character

Oud In Chiaroscuro: Oudh Noir Dsh Perfumes by DSH Perfumes offers a distinctive olfactory experience that stands out from other fragrances in its category.

Artisanal Creation

Crafted with the finest ingredients and a blend of traditional and modern perfumery techniques, this fragrance represents the pinnacle of the perfumer's art.

Signature Style

Oud In Chiaroscuro: Oudh Noir Dsh Perfumes embodies the distinctive style of DSH Perfumes while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.

Character Profile

The Mystic Archetype: Portrait of Oud In Chiaroscuro: Oudh Noir Dsh Perfumes

Essence

This person is most closely aligned with the Mystic archetype-the seeker of hidden truths, the one who dwells in the liminal spaces between light and dark. Oud In Chiaroscuro, with its interplay of smoky oud, resins, and elusive floral whispers, mirrors their essence: a soul drawn to depth, mystery, and the sacred. They are not content with surface realities; they crave the unseen, the symbolic, the transcendent.

Like the chiaroscuro technique in painting, their personality thrives on contrast-intellect and intuition, solitude and intimacy, austerity and sensuality. They are not merely drawn to darkness for its own sake, but because they understand that true illumination requires shadow.

Style & Aesthetic

Their tastes are deliberate, refined, yet never ostentatious. They prefer textures that tell a story-aged leather, rough-hewn wood, the weight of a well-worn book. Their wardrobe leans toward the monastic: draped fabrics, deep hues, garments that suggest ritual rather than trend. They might wear a single piece of jewelry-a talisman, perhaps-imbued with personal meaning.

In art, they are drawn to the surreal, the sacred, and the melancholic. A Caravaggio painting would speak to them more than a bright Impressionist scene; they find beauty in the tension between revelation and concealment. Music for them is an act of devotion-Gregorian chants, ambient soundscapes, or the deep resonance of a cello.

Their life is structured around ritual. Morning might begin with meditation, the burning of oud chips, or the slow savoring of black coffee in a handmade cup. They are drawn to places of quiet power-libraries, old cathedrals, forests at dusk. Travel, if they indulge in it, is never frivolous; they seek pilgrimage sites, ruins, cities where history whispers from the stones.

Work must have meaning beyond mere utility. They might be a writer, a scholar, a perfumer, a therapist-any vocation that allows them to explore the unseen. Routine mundanity drains them; they thrive when their labor feels like an act of devotion.

Philosophy & Values

They believe in the primacy of experience over doctrine. Organized religion may intrigue them, but they are more likely to craft their own spiritual path-one woven from fragments of mysticism, philosophy, and personal revelation. They value silence as much as speech, seeing solitude not as loneliness but as a necessary retreat for inner alchemy.

Truth, for them, is not absolute but layered-a thing to be uncovered slowly, like the unfolding of a rare incense. They are wary of dogmatism, yet they may fall into the trap of intellectual pride, believing their insights superior to those of others.

Relationships

Their relationships are few but intense. They do not suffer small talk gladly; they seek those who can converse in the language of symbols, who understand that a glance can hold more meaning than an hour of chatter. Romantic partners must be willing to navigate their depths-to accept that love, for them, is a sacred pact, not merely companionship.

Yet here lies their shadow: their intensity can become isolating. They may withdraw too far, mistaking solitude for wisdom, or they may demand too much of others, expecting them to share their own relentless introspection. Their love can be overwhelming, a flame that either illuminates or consumes.

Shadow

For all their wisdom, the Mystic risks becoming lost in their own labyrinth. Their pursuit of depth can turn into escapism; their love of the enigmatic may harden into disdain for the simple and the mundane. They may grow impatient with those who do not share their vision, dismissing them as shallow.

There is also the danger of self-deception-believing their solitude is always chosen, their melancholy always profound. At times, they must remind themselves that wisdom without warmth is merely cleverness, and that even the darkest oud must sometimes be touched by light.

Conclusion

Oud In Chiaroscuro is not merely a fragrance to them; it is an extension of their soul. Its smoky depths reflect their inner world, its subtle floral whispers hint at the tenderness beneath their solemnity. They are the keeper of secrets, the one who walks between worlds-both blessed and burdened by their vision.

To know them is to understand that light is meaningless without shadow, and that the most profound truths are often found in the interplay of both.