Oud In A Minor The Cologne House
Fragrance Story
Oud in A Minor by The Cologne House is a Oriental fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Oud in A Minor was launched in 2022. The nose behind this fragrance is Mohamed Alkawa. Top notes are Leather and Molasses; middle notes are Oak, Iris, Agarwood (Oud), Quince and Rice; base notes are Vetiver and Tolu Balsam.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Mohamed Alkawa
Mohamed Alkawa is a perfumer for The Cologne House, where he has composed two distinct fragrances. Bergamot In C Major highlights bright citrus notes in a structured composition. Oud In A Minor explores deep, resinous woods with a musical sensibility. His work emphasizes harmony and contrast between simple, powerful ingredients.
Fragrance Notes
Oud In A Minor The Cologne House by The Cologne House 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 In A Minor The Cologne House embodies the distinctive style of The Cologne House while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Oud Enthusiast Archetype: Portrait of Oud In A Minor The Cologne House
Essence
To wear Oud In A Minor is to embrace an aura of mystery, a scent that lingers between the sacred and the sensual. This fragrance-dark, resinous, with whispers of spice and smoke-belongs to someone who thrives in the liminal spaces of life. They are neither fully of this world nor entirely detached from it; they exist in a realm of their own making, where intensity and introspection collide.
The dominant archetype here is The Mystic-a seeker of hidden truths, drawn to the enigmatic and the profound. Like the oud itself, which is both ancient and intoxicating, this person is deeply attuned to the unseen currents of existence. They are not content with surface-level interactions or fleeting pleasures; they crave meaning, depth, and a connection to something transcendent.
Yet, The Mystic is not without shadows. Their relentless pursuit of the ineffable can make them detached, even aloof, from the mundane realities of life. They may grow impatient with those who do not share their intensity, retreating into solitude when the world feels too shallow.
Style & Aesthetic
Their tastes are deliberate, refined, and often unconventional. They prefer the weight of history in their belongings-antique books, handcrafted leather, aged whiskey, the kind of music that feels like a whispered secret. Their wardrobe leans toward dark, textured fabrics, favoring deep greens, blacks, and rich browns-colors that suggest depth rather than flash.
They are drawn to art that unsettles as much as it enchants: surrealist paintings, gothic literature, films that leave the viewer in a state of quiet unease. Beauty, for them, must have an edge-something unresolved, something that lingers in the mind long after the encounter.
They are not hermits, but they are selective in their engagements. They thrive in dimly lit spaces-bookshops at dusk, jazz bars, late-night philosophical debates. Their home is a sanctuary, filled with artifacts of their inner world: incense, well-worn journals, a record player spinning vinyl that sounds like a memory.
Professionally, they are drawn to fields that allow for introspection and creativity-writing, psychology, music, or even esoteric trades like perfumery or rare book collecting. They disdain corporate mundanity, preferring work that feels like an extension of their soul.
Philosophy & Values
They believe that life’s truest meaning lies beneath the obvious. Superficiality is their greatest aversion; they despise small talk, preferring conversations that spiral into the existential. Their philosophy is not dogmatic but fluid-a blend of Eastern mysticism, existentialism, and a touch of romantic melancholy.
They value authenticity above all else, often to a fault. They would rather be misunderstood than compromise their inner truth. This can make them appear rigid or judgmental, though their intention is never cruelty-only a refusal to dilute themselves for the comfort of others.
Relationships
Their relationships are few but intense. They do not give their trust lightly, but once given, it is unwavering. They attract those who are drawn to their depth, yet they often struggle with the demands of emotional reciprocity. Love, for them, is a paradox-they crave profound connection but fear the loss of autonomy.
Romantically, they are magnetic but elusive. They enchant partners with their intensity, yet their need for solitude can leave others feeling abandoned. Their love is not possessive; they respect the independence of those they care for, but this very detachment can be mistaken for indifference.
Shadow
For all their wisdom, they are not immune to their own contradictions. Their search for meaning can become a form of escapism, a way to avoid the messiness of human connection. They may grow cynical, dismissing ordinary joys as trivial-forgetting that even the mystic must sometimes descend from the mountain.
Their greatest challenge is balance: to honor their depth without losing touch with the tangible world, to seek the sublime without scorning the simple.
Conclusion
To love oud is to embrace the tension between shadow and light, between the sacred and the worldly. This person is not merely a wearer of fragrance but a living embodiment of its essence-complex, lingering, impossible to fully grasp. They are a reminder that some souls are not meant to be easily understood, only deeply felt.
And perhaps that is enough.