Harukaze Oud Factory
Fragrance Story
Harukaze by Oud Factory is a Oriental Woody fragrance for women and men. Harukaze was launched in 2023. The nose behind this fragrance is Xenom.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Xenom
Xenom is a perfumer known for their work with Oud Factory, creating a wide range of fragrances including Akai Kemuri, Amour Mysterieux, Coração De Rosas, Dōkutsu Kanam, Encens Noir, Flamme Rouge, Flor Del Mati, and Fumo Dolce. Their compositions often feature rich, smoky, and resinous accords with a focus on oud. Xenom's style is bold and evocative, appealing to lovers of intense, complex scents.
Fragrance Notes
Harukaze Oud Factory by Oud Factory 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.
Harukaze Oud Factory embodies the distinctive style of Oud Factory while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Wanderer Archetype: Portrait of Harukaze Oud Factory
Essence
The Wanderer archetype is the seeker of horizons, the one who moves between worlds with a quiet, restless grace. Harukaze-meaning “spring wind” in Japanese-is a fragrance of gentle transition, a breeze that carries the scent of sandalwood, iris, and the salt of distant shores. The wearer is a soul in motion, always arriving and always leaving, leaving a trail of mystery.
This scent is a study in soft contrasts. The opening is a powdery iris and bergamot, like the first light of spring, but the heart reveals a woody, earthy patchouli and the animalic warmth of ambergris. It is not a destination; it is a journey. The Wanderer wears this fragrance as a compass, a reminder that home is not a place but a state of being.
Style & Aesthetic
The Wanderer’s style is eclectic and functional. They favor layers-a linen shirt under a wool coat, a scarf that can double as a blanket-in a palette of faded earth tones: dusty rose, sage, sand, and the grey of a winter sky. Their aesthetic is one of curated imperfection: a worn leather bag, a hat from a foreign market, boots that have seen many roads.
Their environment is transient. They may live in a small apartment filled with souvenirs, or they may have no fixed address. Their belongings are chosen for utility and memory. Harukaze is their constant companion, a scent that adapts to every climate. They are the person you meet in a café who tells a story that makes you want to pack a bag.
Philosophy & Values
The Wanderer values freedom, experience, and the beauty of impermanence. They believe that life is a journey, not a destination, and that the greatest wealth is the stories we collect. Their philosophy is one of openness: they say yes to the unknown, embrace change, and find wisdom in the road.
They are drawn to the liminal-the spaces between, the moments of transition. For them, a fragrance is a memory captured, a way to carry a place with them. Harukaze is their scent of departure and return, a reminder that every ending is a beginning. They value authenticity over comfort, and they live by the creed that the only constant is change.
Relationships
The Wanderer is a fascinating but elusive presence. They form deep connections quickly, but they are not easy to hold. Their relationships are intense and transient, like a spring wind that warms and then moves on. They are the lover who writes letters from faraway places, the friend who appears after years with a gift and a story.
They are not unfaithful; they are simply committed to their own path. They seek partners who understand that love can be a journey, not a destination. With Harukaze, they leave an impression of softness and distance. Others are drawn to their freedom, even as they know they cannot cage it.
Lifestyle
The Wanderer’s life is a series of journeys, both outer and inner. They may travel frequently, or they may wander through ideas, art, and relationships. Their days are unstructured, guided by curiosity. They are often found in libraries, on trains, in the back rooms of galleries, or walking aimlessly through a new city.
They are self-sufficient and resourceful, able to find beauty in any situation. Their rituals are simple: a morning cup of tea, a journal entry, the application of Harukaze as a grounding ritual before a new adventure. They are not attached to outcomes; they are attached to the experience itself.
Shadow
The Wanderer’s shadow is a fear of commitment and a tendency toward rootlessness. Their love of freedom can become an avoidance of intimacy, a refusal to be still long enough to face their own depths. They may use movement as a way to outrun pain, leaving a trail of unfinished relationships.
Another shadow is the risk of becoming a perpetual outsider, never truly belonging anywhere. The soft, powdery nature of Harukaze can become a veil that keeps others at a distance. The Wanderer must learn that true freedom includes the courage to stay, to let roots grow, to find home within themselves.
Conclusion
Harukaze is the scent of the Wanderer: a fragrance of gentle transition and quiet mystery. It is for those who move through life with grace, who find beauty in the ephemeral, and who understand that the journey is the only destination. To wear it is to embrace the spring wind, to be both here and elsewhere, forever in motion.