Kamel Oud Sora Dora

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2021
Strong
Sillage
Excellent
Longevity
Winter
Best Season
Evening
Best For

Fragrance Story

Kamel Oud by Sora Dora is a Oriental Woody fragrance for women and men. Kamel Oud was launched in 2021. Kamel Oud was created by Amélie Bourgeois, Anne-Sophie Behaghel and Camille Chemardin.

Composition Profile

woody 100%
aromatic 85%
fresh spicy 70%
oud 60%
warm spicy 50%

About the Perfumer

Amelie Bourgeois

Amelie Bourgeois

Amelie Bourgeois is a French perfumer known for her work with the niche houses Aether and Alexandre.J. Her style blends experimental, synthetic accords with natural elements, often exploring contrasts like citrus and musk or rose and alkanes. She created the Aether Oxyde and Carboneum compositions, as well as Alexandre.J’s Mandarine Sultane and Passion Bliss.

Fragrance Notes

All Notes

Complete scent profile

Laotian Oud Laotian Oud
Atlas Cedar Atlas Cedar
Elemi resin Elemi resin
Guaiac Wood Guaiac Wood
Cumin Cumin
Pink Pepper Pink Pepper
Cade oil Cade oil
Raspberry Raspberry
Cardamom Cardamom
Labdanum Labdanum
Papyrus Papyrus
Saffron Saffron
Rose Rose
Juniper Juniper
Aldehydes Aldehydes
Sicilian Bergamot Sicilian Bergamot
Unique Character

Kamel Oud Sora Dora by Sora Dora 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

Kamel Oud Sora Dora embodies the distinctive style of Sora Dora while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.

Character Profile

The Mystic Archetype: Portrait of Kamel Oud Sora Dora

Essence

The person who gravitates toward Kamel Oud Sora Dora is not merely drawn to a fragrance-they are seduced by its depth, its contradictions, its whispers of the sacred and the sensual. This is the domain of the Mystic, an archetype that seeks transcendence through experience, finding meaning in the interplay of shadow and light. The Mystic is not content with surface pleasures; they crave the sublime, the enigmatic, the alchemical fusion of opposites.

Oud, with its smoky, animalic richness, is no ordinary scent-it is an invocation, a ritual in liquid form. To wear it is to declare an affinity for the hidden, the esoteric, the intoxicating dance between decay and divinity. The Mystic understands this instinctively.

Style & Aesthetic

Their aesthetic is deliberate, layered, and symbolic. They favor dark, rich textures-velvet, aged leather, silk that whispers against the skin. Their wardrobe is a curated collection of pieces that feel timeless, as if they belong to another era. They might wear a vintage brooch with a modern suit, or a prayer bead bracelet as a subtle nod to their inner world.

In art, they are drawn to the Baroque and the Symbolist-Caravaggio’s chiaroscuro, Klimt’s gold-leafed eroticism, the poetry of Rumi and Baudelaire. Music for them is an invocation-Gregorian chants, Sufi qawwalis, or the dark ambient hum of Dead Can Dance. They do not consume culture passively; they ritualize it, turning listening into meditation, viewing into prayer.

Their home is a sanctuary, filled with books, candles, and artifacts collected from travels or antique markets. They might keep a small altar-not for worship, but as a focal point for contemplation. Their daily rituals are sacred: morning tea sipped in silence, journaling by candlelight, the deliberate application of their chosen scent as an act of self-consecration.

They are drawn to solitude but not loneliness. They need time alone to recalibrate, to listen to the whispers of their own soul. Yet, when they choose to engage with the world, they do so fully-conversations with them are not small talk but dialogues, probing, challenging, revelatory.

Philosophy & Values

This person moves through the world with an air of quiet intensity. They are not loud, but their presence lingers, like incense in an ancient temple. Their philosophy is one of depth over breadth-they would rather know one thing profoundly than many things superficially. They are drawn to philosophy, mythology, and the occult, finding in these disciplines the keys to understanding existence.

They reject the mundane, the transactional, the purely material. For them, life is a sacred text, and every experience-love, suffering, pleasure-is a verse to be deciphered. They are not religious in a conventional sense, but they are deeply spiritual, seeing divinity in the cracks of reality, in the scent of oud lingering on skin long after the day has faded.

Relationships

The Mystic does not form bonds lightly. Their relationships are intense, selective, and often transformative. They attract others effortlessly-there is something magnetic in their quiet confidence, their refusal to conform. But they are not easily known. Their love is deep but demanding; they expect their partners to meet them at the edge of the abyss, to see the world as they do.

They are not cruel, but they can be distant, lost in their own labyrinthine thoughts. Their shadow emerges when their search for meaning becomes a form of escapism-when they withdraw too far into their inner sanctum, leaving others stranded at the threshold.

Shadow

Every archetype has its shadow, and the Mystic is no exception. When unbalanced, their quest for depth can become obsessive, their spirituality a form of elitism. They may disdain those who do not share their intensity, dismissing them as shallow or unenlightened.

At worst, they can become the Fanatic, convinced of their own gnosis, unwilling to question their beliefs. Or they may retreat into the Hermit, cutting themselves off from human connection in pursuit of an unattainable purity.

But when in harmony, the Mystic is a guide, a keeper of hidden wisdom, a reminder that beauty and meaning are not found in the obvious, but in the spaces between.

Conclusion

To wear Kamel Oud Sora Dora is to declare allegiance to the unseen, to the mysteries that linger beneath the surface of things. The Mystic knows that life is not just lived but decoded, that every scent, every glance, every fleeting emotion is part of a greater tapestry.

They are not perfect-they are too complex for that. But in their flaws, their contradictions, their relentless pursuit of the sublime, they embody something rare: a life lived awake, in full awareness of both the light and the dark.