Oud Reverie Laverne

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2024
Strong
Sillage
Very Good
Longevity
Fall
Best Season
Evening
Best For

Fragrance Story

Oud Reverie by Laverne is a Woody Aromatic fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Oud Reverie was launched in 2024. The nose behind this fragrance is Jordi Fernández. Top notes are Cardamom and Fig Leaf; middle notes are Cedarwood and Lactones; base notes are Tonka Bean and Vanilla.

Composition Profile

warm spicy 100%
green 85%
woody 70%
fresh 60%
aromatic 50%
vanilla 40%
sweet 35%
lactonic 30%
powdery 25%

About the Perfumer

Jordi Fernández

Jordi Fernández

Jordi Fernández contributed to fragrances for the 24 brand, including Elixir Ambrosia, Elixir Azur, Elixir Neroli, Gold, Gold Oud Edition, and Platinum, as well as Genetic Bliss for 27 87. His work spans luxurious and modern compositions, often featuring rich accords and innovative blends. He brings a contemporary sensibility to each project.

Fragrance Notes

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Cardamom Cardamom
Fig Leaf Fig Leaf

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Cedarwood Cedarwood
Lactones Lactones

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Tonka Bean Tonka Bean
Vanilla Vanilla

Character Profile

The Mystic Archetype: Portrait of Oud Reverie Laverne

Essence

The person who gravitates toward Oud Reverie Laverne is not merely a lover of fragrance but a seeker of depth-someone who perceives scent as an extension of the soul. Their dominant archetype is The Mystic, one who dwells in the liminal spaces between the material and the transcendent. Oud, with its smoky, resinous, and almost sacred aura, mirrors their inner world: complex, layered, and veiled in quiet intensity.

This archetype is drawn to the unseen, the symbolic, the whispers of existence that others overlook. They do not wear fragrance; they inhabit it. The Mystic is both a philosopher and a poet, though they may never claim either title. Their life is a meditation-sometimes serene, sometimes turbulent-on the nature of meaning itself.

Style & Aesthetic

Their wardrobe is an extension of their psyche: dark, textured, timeless. They favor fabrics that tell stories-linen that wrinkles like parchment, wool that carries the weight of history, leather that ages with grace. Their style is not trend-driven but ritualistic, each piece chosen as an incantation rather than a statement.

Jewelry, if worn at all, is symbolic: a signet ring, a talisman, something that carries personal myth rather than mere adornment. Their home is a sanctuary of shadows and candlelight, where books outnumber screens, and the air is thick with incense.

But here, too, lies a shadow: the potential for affectation. The line between authenticity and performance is thin. Do they truly love the weight of velvet, or do they love the idea of loving it? The Mystic must guard against becoming a curator of their own image rather than a living, breathing soul.

Their days are structured around rituals, not routines. Morning coffee is a meditation; nightfall is an invocation. They read voraciously but selectively, preferring philosophy, esoterica, and literature that demands interpretation. They may write-not for an audience, but as an act of communion with the unseen.

Work is either a calling or a necessary distraction. If they are fortunate, they find a vocation that allows them to dwell in abstraction-art, academia, perfumery, healing. If not, they endure the mundane by treating it as a temporary exile.

Yet, their shadow is passivity. The Mystic can become so entranced by the inner world that they neglect the outer one. Dreams remain dreams, and potential goes unrealized.

Philosophy & Values

To them, life is not a series of events but a tapestry of symbols. They reject the superficial in favor of the enigmatic, finding beauty in decay, wisdom in silence, and truth in paradox. Their values are rooted in authenticity, but not the kind that shouts-rather, the kind that lingers in the air like the last note of oud, subtle yet undeniable.

They believe in the sacredness of solitude. While others chase connection through noise, they find it in the quietude of their own mind. Their spirituality is not dogmatic but experiential; they are as likely to be moved by a Sufi poem as by the scent of aged wood or the weight of an ancient text.

Yet, this reverence for depth can become a form of elitism-their shadow. They may dismiss those who do not "understand" as shallow, mistaking their own introspection for superiority. The Mystic risks becoming the Hermit, retreating so far into their inner sanctum that they forget how to speak the language of the world.

Relationships

They do not have friends; they have confidants. Their relationships are few but profound, built on shared silences as much as shared words. They attract those who sense their depth but may struggle with those who demand simplicity. Romantic partners are either fellow seekers or admirers from a distance-rarely in between.

Their love is intense but not possessive. They understand that to truly know another is to release them into mystery. Yet, their shadow here is emotional inaccessibility. They may mistake solitude for strength, withholding vulnerability under the guise of wisdom.

Conclusion

At their best, they are a beacon of depth in a world that prizes speed. They remind others that life is not just to be lived but to be contemplated. At their worst, they become lost in their own labyrinth, mistaking obscurity for profundity.

Oud Reverie Laverne is their scent because it does not announce itself-it unfolds. Like them, it is not for everyone. But for those who pause long enough to truly perceive it, it lingers, unforgettable.