Oud Di Corleone Maison Anthony Marmin

For Men
Eau de Parfum
Year: Unknown
Strong
Sillage
Excellent
Longevity
Winter
Best Season
Evening
Best For

Fragrance Story

Oud di Corleone by Maison Anthony Marmin is a fragrance for men. The nose behind this fragrance is Anthony Abdul Karim Marmin.

Composition Profile

citrus 100%
woody 85%
coffee 70%
warm spicy 60%
animalic 50%

About the Perfumer

Anthony Abdul Karim Marmin

Anthony Abdul Karim Marmin

Anthony Abdul Karim Marmin is a perfumer closely associated with the house of Abdul Karim Al Faransi, where he has created a wide range of fragrances. His style spans bold, resinous compositions like Amber 4000 and Amber Afghani, as well as more complex, evocative scents such as Al Quds and Amazonia. Known for blending traditional Middle Eastern ingredients with modern accords, his work often features rich amber, oud, and spice notes.

Fragrance Notes

All Notes

Complete scent profile

Sicilian Orange Sicilian Orange
Coffee Coffee
Cambodian Oud Cambodian Oud
Lemon Lemon
Woody Notes Woody Notes
Grapefruit Grapefruit
Unique Character

Oud Di Corleone Maison Anthony Marmin by Maison Anthony Marmin 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 Di Corleone Maison Anthony Marmin embodies the distinctive style of Maison Anthony Marmin while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.

Character Profile

The Sovereign Archetype: Portrait of Oud Di Corleone Maison Anthony Marmin

Essence

To wear Oud Di Corleone is to command presence without raising one’s voice. This fragrance-dark, resinous, and unapologetically bold-belongs to a person who understands power not as brute force, but as an art form. They are the Sovereign, an archetype of mastery, authority, and cultivated taste. Their life is a carefully composed performance, where every gesture, every choice, carries weight.

The Sovereign is not born into dominance; they claim it. Their presence is magnetic, not because they demand attention, but because they assume it as their due. They move through the world with the quiet assurance of someone who has studied the rules-and now bends them.

Their tastes are deliberate, favoring the timeless over the transient. They wear tailored suits or structured dresses, fabrics that whisper rather than shout. Their home is a curated space-dark woods, leather-bound books, perhaps a vintage record player spinning jazz or classical compositions. They appreciate craftsmanship, whether in a well-aged whiskey, a hand-stitched leather briefcase, or the slow burn of oud on their skin.

Philosophically, they believe in order-not the rigid kind imposed by others, but the kind they impose upon themselves. Discipline is their weapon; refinement, their armor. They do not chase trends because they understand that true power lies in permanence.

Shadow

Yet power, even when wielded gracefully, isolates. The Sovereign’s flaw is their detachment. They may mistake control for wisdom, dismissing emotions as weakness. Their relationships can become transactional, not out of malice, but because they struggle to surrender control. Vulnerability feels like a loss of sovereignty.

There is also the danger of decadence-of mistaking luxury for meaning. The Sovereign may grow too comfortable in their self-made kingdom, forgetting that true mastery requires evolution. The oud on their skin, rich and intoxicating, can become a shield against the messiness of life.

Conclusion

The Sovereign’s greatest strength is their ability to lead without tyranny. They inspire loyalty because they exude competence. In relationships, they are protective, even paternalistic-not out of condescension, but from a genuine belief that those they care for deserve the best. Their love is not effusive, but it is deep, expressed through acts rather than words.

Professionally, they thrive in roles where strategy and presence matter: executives, diplomats, artists who command their medium. They do not scramble for approval; they let their work speak for itself. Their confidence is not arrogance-it is the quiet certainty of someone who has earned their place.