Elvis The Lion Qod Barber Shop
Fragrance Story
Elvis The Lion by QOD Barber Shop is a Oriental Woody fragrance for men. This is a new fragrance. Elvis The Lion was launched in 2022. Top notes are Violet Leaf, Lemon, Mandarin Orange and Bergamot; middle notes are Cardamom, Black Pepper, Mate, Rose, Jasmine and Lily Of the Valley Leaves; base notes are Agarwood (Oud), Amber, Patchouli, Musk, Sandalwood and Vanilla.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Unknown Perfumer
Fragrance Notes
Elvis The Lion Qod Barber Shop by QOD Barber Shop 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.
Elvis The Lion Qod Barber Shop embodies the distinctive style of QOD Barber Shop while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Archetype Archetype: Portrait of Elvis The Lion Qod Barber Shop
Essence
To choose a fragrance like Elvis The Lion Qod Barber Shop is to embrace a paradox-a scent that is at once nostalgic and rebellious, classic yet subversive. This is not a person who seeks the safe or the predictable; they are drawn to the raw, the masculine, the unapologetically bold. The fragrance itself-barbershop-inspired but with a modern, animalic twist-mirrors their psyche: traditional in form but wild in spirit.
Above all, they embody The Outlaw, an archetype that thrives on breaking conventions while still respecting the past. They are not a mere rebel without cause, nor a traditionalist bound by nostalgia. Instead, they exist in the tension between order and chaos, crafting their own rules while acknowledging the weight of history. The barbershop accord speaks to tradition, to the rituals of masculinity passed down through generations, while the lion-the wild, untamed essence-whispers of something primal, untethered.
Style & Aesthetic
Their aesthetic is a blend of refinement and ruggedness. Think tailored denim, boots that have seen miles, a watch that tells more than time-it tells a story. They appreciate craftsmanship, the kind that bears the marks of human hands. Their home might be filled with dark woods, brass accents, and the faint scent of tobacco lingering in the air.
In music, they gravitate toward blues, outlaw country, or raw rock 'n' roll-anything that carries the grit of lived experience. They don’t just listen; they feel it in their bones.
Philosophy & Values
Their life is a deliberate act of defiance against the mundane. They reject the sanitized, mass-produced versions of masculinity peddled by modern culture, preferring instead the rough-hewn authenticity of an older world. They might collect vintage razors, wear well-worn leather jackets, or have a bookshelf filled with Kerouac, Hemingway, and Bukowski-not out of pretension, but because these voices resonate with their soul.
Philosophically, they believe in strength through struggle. Comfort is an illusion; true character is forged in resistance. They admire those who carve their own path, whether artists, warriors, or lone wanderers. Yet, unlike the nihilist, they do not reject meaning-they demand that it be earned.
Relationships
They are loyal to a fault, but only to those who prove themselves worthy. Their circle is small, their trust hard-won. They despise superficiality, and small talk is a form of torture. Yet, once someone earns their respect, they become a steadfast ally, the kind who shows up unasked when life turns cruel.
Romantically, they are drawn to partners who match their intensity-someone who is neither fragile nor domineering, but self-possessed. They crave passion, but not drama; independence, but not indifference. Their love is fierce, protective, but never possessive.
Shadow
Every Outlaw risks becoming a Tyrant-a figure so consumed by their own code that they demand others follow it. Their strength can curdle into stubbornness; their independence into isolation. They may dismiss those who don’t share their values as weak, failing to see that true strength lies in flexibility.
At their worst, they romanticize suffering, mistaking hardship for virtue. They might push people away under the guise of self-reliance, only to later resent the loneliness they’ve created. The lion in them, untamed, can become a beast that refuses to be tamed even when it should.
Conclusion
They are neither entirely civilized nor entirely feral. They walk the line, a modern-day rogue with one foot in the past and the other stepping into the unknown. Elvis The Lion Qod Barber Shop is their scent because it is a contradiction-just like them. It is tradition with teeth, elegance with a growl.
And though they may never fully belong-to a time, to a place, to a single way of being-they wouldn’t have it any other way.