Oud Noir Jinkoh Store

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2024
Strong
Sillage
Excellent
Longevity
Winter
Best Season
Evening
Best For

Fragrance Story

Oud Noir by Jinkoh Store is a Oriental Woody fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Oud Noir was launched in 2024. The nose behind this fragrance is Marius Pana.

Composition Profile

woody 100%
animalic 85%
leather 70%
smoky 60%
oud 50%
musky 40%
warm spicy 35%

About the Perfumer

Marius Pana

Marius Pana

Marius Pana is a perfumer for Grande Perfumes and Jinkoh Store, creating scents like Ambresso, Cuore Grande, and Ananda Qi & Iris. His work frequently features oud, iris, and amber, with a focus on rich, resinous compositions. He specializes in complex, oriental-inspired fragrances.

Fragrance Notes

All Notes

Complete scent profile

Cambodian Oud Cambodian Oud
Oud Oud
Birch Tar Birch Tar
Guaiac Wood Guaiac Wood
Castoreum Castoreum
Civet Civet
Patchouli Patchouli
Vanilla Vanilla
Leather Leather
Resins Resins
Musk Musk
Ink Ink
Balsamic Notes Balsamic Notes
Unique Character

Oud Noir Jinkoh Store by Jinkoh Store 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 Noir Jinkoh Store embodies the distinctive style of Jinkoh Store while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.

Character Profile

The Sage Archetype: Portrait of Oud Noir Jinkoh Store

Essence

Oud Noir Jinkoh Store is a scent of depth, mystery, and quiet intensity-dark, resinous, and enveloping, with an undercurrent of warmth. It is not loud, nor does it seek attention, yet it lingers in the mind long after it has left the air. The person who chooses this fragrance is drawn to complexity, to the interplay of shadow and light, and to the wisdom that comes from contemplation rather than haste.

Above all, this individual embodies the Sage-the seeker of truth, the observer of life’s hidden patterns. Like the oud itself, which is aged and refined over time, the Sage values knowledge, introspection, and the slow accumulation of insight. They are not swayed by fleeting trends or superficial charm; they seek substance, meaning, and the quiet power of understanding.

Yet, the Sage is not without their shadow. Their pursuit of wisdom can become isolation. Their love for depth can turn into skepticism of all that is simple or joyful. They may, at times, mistake detachment for enlightenment, forgetting that even the darkest oud must eventually mingle with the air to be truly experienced.

Style & Aesthetic

Their tastes are deliberate, refined, and often unconventional. They prefer the weight of a well-bound book to the ephemeral glow of a screen, the texture of handcrafted leather to mass-produced fashion. Their wardrobe leans toward muted tones-charcoal, deep burgundy, midnight blue-with occasional flashes of gold or silver, like the rare glint of insight in a long meditation.

They are drawn to art that demands interpretation: abstract paintings, avant-garde cinema, or the haunting melodies of classical compositions played on ancient instruments. Their home is a sanctuary of curated objects-antique maps, incense burners, a single bonsai tree that they tend with monastic patience.

Their days are structured but not rigid. Mornings may begin with meditation or journaling; evenings are spent in quiet study or solitary walks under dim streetlights. They are not ascetics-they enjoy fine wine, rare spices, the occasional cigar-but their pleasures are measured, never indulged without thought.

Work, for them, must have meaning. They are drawn to fields that allow for deep focus: academia, philosophy, perfumery, or perhaps the quiet precision of a master craftsman. They despise busywork, the mindless churn of modern productivity. If forced into such environments, they wither like a plant denied sunlight.

Philosophy & Values

They believe that truth is not found in answers but in better questions. Life, to them, is a labyrinth to be navigated with curiosity rather than conquered with force. They value silence as much as speech, knowing that some truths can only be heard in the absence of noise.

Yet, their reverence for wisdom can become a form of arrogance. They may dismiss those who live by instinct rather than analysis, forgetting that not all knowledge comes from books. Their skepticism, while sharp, can harden into cynicism-a belief that the world is too shallow for them, rather than considering that they might be too rigid for the world.

Relationships

They do not have many friends, but the ones they keep are bound by intellectual kinship. Conversations with them are not light; they are exchanges of ideas, debates that last until dawn, laced with dark coffee or aged whiskey. Romance, for them, is a slow burn-they are drawn to those who can match their depth, who are unafraid of silence and unimpressed by hollow charm.

Yet, their reluctance to engage in trivialities can make them seem aloof. They may unintentionally push away warmth, mistaking emotional openness for naivety. Their relationships often suffer from their own high standards-few can meet their expectations, and they rarely lower them.

Shadow

In their highest expression, the Sage is a guide-someone who illuminates the path for others without needing to lead them. Their wisdom is not hoarded but shared, their insights offered like rare incense, enriching the air without demanding attention.

But in their shadow, they become the Hermit-withdrawn, distrustful of the world’s noise, convinced that only they truly see. Here, their love of depth becomes a prison, their skepticism a shield against life’s necessary messiness. The very wisdom they cherish can turn into a barrier between them and the raw, unfiltered experience of being alive.

Conclusion

The lover of Oud Noir Jinkoh Store is neither saint nor cynic, but a soul in constant negotiation between the two. They understand that darkness is not the absence of light but its companion, that wisdom is not the rejection of simplicity but the ability to see its hidden layers.

If they can learn to step out of their own mind occasionally-to let the world in, unanalyzed, unfiltered-they will find that even the deepest oud must, at times, surrender to the wind.