Wood And Cognac The Dua Brand

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2016
Strong
Sillage
Excellent
Longevity
Fall
Best Season
Evening
Best For

Fragrance Story

Wood And Cognac by The Dua Brand is a Oriental Woody fragrance for women and men. Wood And Cognac was launched in 2016. The nose behind this fragrance is Mahsam Raza.

Composition Profile

woody 100%
warm spicy 85%
oud 70%
cacao 60%
powdery 50%
sweet 40%
balsamic 35%

About the Perfumer

Mahsam Raza

Mahsam Raza

Mahsam Raza is a perfumer whose catalog spans Eighteen Fifty Parfums and The Dua Brand, featuring scents like Chaplin In Venice, Chateau, La Jolla, and Arabian Amber Nuit. His fragrances often explore themes of luxury and opulence, using rich notes such as oud, amber, and floral accords. He is recognized for creating bold, long-lasting compositions.

Fragrance Notes

All Notes

Complete scent profile

Cognac Cognac
Sandalwood Sandalwood
Agarwood (Oud) Agarwood (Oud)
Cacao Pod Cacao Pod
Chestnut Chestnut
Tonka Bean Tonka Bean
Geranium Geranium

Character Profile

The Sage Archetype: Portrait of Wood And Cognac The Dua Brand

Essence

This person is most closely aligned with the Philosopher-King-an archetype that blends wisdom, refinement, and quiet authority. They are drawn to fragrances like Wood and Cognac because they evoke depth, warmth, and a touch of decadence-qualities they embody in both thought and presence. Like the scent, they are layered: earthy and grounded yet intoxicating in their complexity. They do not seek to dominate but to understand, and their presence lingers long after they depart.

Style & Aesthetic

Their tastes are deliberate, never frivolous. They prefer the weight of aged leather, the grain of dark wood, the burn of a well-aged spirit-things that carry history and substance. Their wardrobe leans toward timeless pieces: tailored wool coats, well-worn boots, perhaps a signet ring passed down through generations. They do not chase trends but curate an existence that feels like a well-composed novel-each detail chosen for its resonance.

Bookshelves in their home are lined with philosophy, mythology, and the occasional volume of poetry. They appreciate jazz and classical music, not for pretension but for the way these genres unfold like conversations. Their palate favors smoky single malts, bitter dark chocolate, and slow-cooked meals that demand patience.

They are likely drawn to professions that reward patience and insight-perhaps academia, law, writing, or craftsmanship. They work with precision, not haste, and they disdain shortcuts. Their home is a sanctuary: dim lighting, a record player, a writing desk cluttered with notes. They may practice a solitary discipline-woodworking, calligraphy, martial arts-something that demands both body and mind.

They travel not for escapism but for immersion, preferring quiet villages over bustling cities. They enjoy the ritual of coffee in the morning, a cigar on rare occasions, the way dusk turns the world amber.

Philosophy & Values

They believe in the examined life, in questioning rather than accepting. Stoicism appeals to them, but not as a rigid doctrine-more as a tool for navigating chaos without losing composure. They value integrity above all, though they are not naive; they know the world is flawed and that virtue is often a quiet rebellion.

Their morality is not dogmatic but intuitive-they trust their discernment. They despise shallowness, yet they are not unkind; they simply have little tolerance for those who mistake noise for meaning. Their humor is dry, their insights sharp. They do not suffer fools, but they will mentor those who show genuine curiosity.

Relationships

They are not gregarious, but their friendships are profound. They attract people who crave depth, who are tired of surface-level exchanges. Their love language is intellectual as much as physical-they express care through conversation, through shared silence, through the gift of a well-chosen book.

Romantically, they are intense but not possessive. They seek a partner who is both an equal and a mystery-someone who challenges them, who does not need them but chooses them daily. Their relationships are built on mutual respect, though their shadow may struggle with emotional detachment, retreating into thought when feeling becomes overwhelming.

Shadow

Their greatest strength-their self-sufficiency-can become their flaw. They risk isolation, mistaking solitude for wisdom when, at times, it is merely avoidance. Their discernment can harden into cynicism, their patience into passivity. They may withhold vulnerability, rationalizing it as strength, when in truth, even kings need counsel.

They must guard against intellectual pride, the belief that understanding life exempts them from living it. The warmth of cognac is meaningless if never shared.

Conclusion

This is a person who moves through the world like smoke-elusive, lingering, impossible to grasp entirely. They are not for everyone, nor do they wish to be. Their fragrance-woody, boozy, subtly intoxicating-is a mirror of their soul: complex, enduring, best appreciated by those who take the time to truly inhale.

They are not perfect, nor do they seek to be. They seek only to be true. And in that, they succeed.