Oud Oriental Saba Reine De Saba
Fragrance Story
Oud Oriental Saba by Reine de Saba is a Oriental Woody fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Oud Oriental Saba was launched in 2022. The nose behind this fragrance is Bruno Jovanovic. Top notes are Black Currant Blossom, Saffron and Black Pepper; middle notes are Rose, Cinnamon and Cedar; base notes are Agarwood (Oud), Cetalox, Labdanum and Dreamwood.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Bruno Jovanovic
Bruno Jovanovic is a versatile perfumer whose work spans multiple brands, including A Lab on Fire, Abercrombie & Fitch, Al-Jazeera Perfumes, Amouage, Avon, and Awshal. His catalog features Almost Transparent Blue, Fierce, 380, Moscow, Opus Xii - Rose Incense, The Library Collection Rose Incense, Crystal Aura, and Perles De Myrrhe. Jovanovic's compositions range from fresh and sporty to rich and incense-laden, demonstrating his broad expertise.
Fragrance Notes
Oud Oriental Saba Reine De Saba by Reine de Saba 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.
Oud Oriental Saba Reine De Saba embodies the distinctive style of Reine de Saba while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Mystic Archetype: Portrait of Oud Oriental Saba Reine De Saba
Essence
This person is defined by the Mystic archetype-a seeker of depth, transcendence, and hidden truths. The scent of Oud Oriental Saba Reine De Saba-dark, resinous, opulent-mirrors their soul: complex, layered, and drawn to the enigmatic. Like the Mystic, they are not content with surface pleasures; they crave meaning, ritual, and the sublime. Oud is not merely a fragrance to them but an invocation, a bridge between the material and the ineffable.
Style & Aesthetic
They dress in a way that suggests deliberation-every texture, every drape of fabric is intentional. Dark silks, aged leather, perhaps a single piece of antique jewelry with obscure symbolism. Their home is a temple of shadows and candlelight, where incense lingers and objects are arranged with ritualistic care. They are drawn to the patina of time-nothing too polished, nothing sterile.
Their taste in art favors the baroque, the gothic, the mystical. A Caravaggio painting would resonate with them more than a minimalist abstraction. They appreciate craftsmanship, the weight of history in an object, the whisper of stories untold.
Philosophy & Values
Their life is a pilgrimage-not necessarily in the religious sense, but in the pursuit of experiences that elevate the mundane into the sacred. They are drawn to philosophy, esoteric traditions, and art that disturbs as much as it enchants. Their bookshelf holds Rumi alongside Nietzsche, their music oscillates between Sufi chants and avant-garde compositions. They believe in the alchemy of suffering-that hardship refines the soul-and they are suspicious of easy answers.
Their philosophy is one of paradox: they embrace both austerity and luxury, solitude and deep communion. They might fast not out of deprivation but as a way to sharpen the senses, only to later indulge in a meticulously prepared feast. Their spirituality is sensual, rooted in the body yet yearning for the beyond.
Relationships
They do not collect acquaintances; their relationships are few but intense. They attract others through their aura of quiet magnetism, but few truly know them. Their love is consuming-when they give themselves, it is with the fervor of a devotee. Yet they demand the same depth in return, and if disappointed, they retreat into solitude like a wounded sage.
They are drawn to those who mirror their own complexity-partners who are neither fully light nor dark but dwell in the twilight. Their friendships are alliances of the spirit, built on shared intellectual and emotional exploration. Superficial chatter exhausts them; they crave conversations that spiral into the abyss and return transformed.
Shadow
The Mystic’s greatest strength is also their peril-their immersion in the symbolic can become a retreat from the real. They risk becoming lost in their own mythos, mistaking introspection for wisdom, obsession for enlightenment. Their disdain for the trivial may harden into contempt, isolating them further.
At their worst, they indulge in self-created melodrama, turning life into a grand narrative where they are both hero and martyr. Their pursuit of the sublime can make them impatient with ordinary joys, dismissing them as unworthy. They may grow secretive, guarding their inner world so fiercely that even those who love them feel shut out.
Conclusion
When integrated, the Mystic does not flee the world but sanctifies it. They find the sacred in a shared meal, in laughter, in the imperfections of human connection. Their depth becomes a gift rather than a burden, their insight a light rather than a veil.
They are the kind of person who leaves an imprint-not through loud declarations, but through the quiet intensity of their presence. To know them is to be invited into a world where every moment holds the potential for revelation, where even silence speaks in riddles.
And when they wear Oud Oriental Saba Reine De Saba, it is not just a scent-it is an incantation, a reminder that beauty and mystery are not separate from life, but its very essence.