Black Oud Lootah Perfumes
Fragrance Story
Black Oud by Lootah Perfumes is a Oriental Woody fragrance for men. This is a new fragrance. Black Oud was launched in 2024. Top notes are Turkish Rose, Cinnamon, Labdanum, Black currant leaf and Raspberry; middle notes are Clove, Sandalwood, Patchouli and Geranium; base notes are Ambroxan, Benzoin, Vanilla and Musk.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Unknown Perfumer
Fragrance Notes
Black Oud Lootah Perfumes by Lootah Perfumes 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.
Black Oud Lootah Perfumes embodies the distinctive style of Lootah Perfumes while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Sovereign Archetype: Portrait of Black Oud Lootah Perfumes
Essence
The one who wears Black Oud Lootah Perfumes is not merely a person but a presence-a figure who moves through the world with the quiet intensity of a philosopher-king. Their archetype is the Sage, the seeker of hidden truths, the one who values wisdom above all else. Oud, with its deep, resinous complexity-smoky yet velvety, ancient yet undeniably potent-mirrors their essence. This is not a fragrance for those who wish to be understood at a glance; it is for those who reveal themselves in layers, who demand contemplation.
Style & Aesthetic
Their wardrobe is deliberate, a visual echo of their inner world. Dark, rich fabrics-cashmere, aged leather, deep indigo silks-dominate. They favor timeless cuts, pieces that suggest permanence rather than trend. Jewelry, if worn at all, is understated: a single signet ring, a worn-in silver chain, something that carries history.
Their surroundings reflect the same intentionality. A study lined with leather-bound books, a dimly lit room where incense curls into the air, a collection of artifacts from travels or inherited heirlooms-each object is chosen, not accumulated.
Their days are structured but not rigid. Mornings may begin with meditation or a slow, deliberate ritual-black coffee, a few pages of a dense text, the careful application of their signature scent. They work in fields that reward depth: academia, psychology, art curation, or perhaps something more enigmatic-a perfumer, a rare book dealer, a consultant in some obscure specialty.
They travel, but not for escapism. They seek places where history lingers in the stones, where the air itself feels thick with stories-Istanbul’s Grand Bazaar, the temples of Kyoto, the desert ruins of Oman.
Philosophy & Values
For them, life is an alchemical experiment-a constant refinement of thought, perception, and experience. They are drawn to the esoteric, the metaphysical, the systems of meaning that elude the casual observer. Stoicism, Sufism, or even the hermetic traditions may whisper to them in quiet moments. They do not believe in easy answers, only in the relentless pursuit of deeper questions.
Yet their wisdom is not purely intellectual. They understand that knowledge must be lived, that truth is not merely grasped but embodied. This is why they are drawn to oud-it is not just a scent but an experience, a bridge between the material and the mystical.
Relationships
They are not gregarious, but neither are they reclusive. Their relationships are few but profound, built on mutual depth rather than convenience. They attract others who sense their gravity, who crave their insights-yet they are wary of those who seek them as an oracle rather than as a person.
Romantically, they are drawn to those who match their intensity. Passion, for them, is not about grand gestures but about silent understanding, the unspoken recognition of another soul’s weight. They are loyal but not possessive; love, like wisdom, must be freely given.
Shadow
Yet wisdom has its price. The Sage’s greatest strength-their detachment, their ability to see beyond the immediate-can become their flaw. They risk withdrawing too far, mistaking solitude for superiority. At their worst, they grow disdainful of those who live in the shallows, forgetting that not all truths must be heavy, not all joys must be profound.
Their love of mystery can also tip into obscurantism-they may withhold, speak in riddles, or cloak simple truths in unnecessary complexity. And their self-sufficiency, while admirable, can harden into isolation, leaving them admired but untouched.
Conclusion
To wear Black Oud is to declare a kinship with the unseen, the enduring. The Sage knows that life’s deepest pleasures are not in the obvious but in the uncovered, the earned. They are neither saint nor cynic, but something rarer-a person who has learned to dwell in the tension between knowing and unknowing, between shadow and light.
And perhaps that is the final lesson of their scent: that the most intoxicating fragrances, like the most compelling lives, are those that linger long after the wearer has passed.