Keep Glazed The House Of Oud

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2019
Moderate
Sillage
Good
Longevity
Summer
Best Season
Evening
Best For

Fragrance Story

Keep Glazed by The House of Oud is a fragrance for women and men. Keep Glazed was launched in 2019. Keep Glazed was created by Cristian Calabro and Andrea (Thero) Casotti. Top notes are Mango, Strawberry Leaf and Iced Lemon; middle notes are Whipped Cream, Coconut and Ginger; base notes are Fruity Notes, Musk and Precious Woods.

Composition Profile

sweet 100%
fruity 85%
tropical 70%
vanilla 60%
lactonic 50%
coconut 40%
citrus 35%

About the Perfumer

Andrea (Thero) Casotti

Andrea (Thero) Casotti

Andrea Casotti, also known as Thero, is a perfumer whose work spans multiple niche brands. He has created fragrances for Anima Mundi including Ankh Sun Amon, Dusara, Isvara, Pompeii, and Tikal, as well as for Jovoy Paris and Moresque. His compositions often explore historical and cultural themes through complex, evocative scent profiles.

Fragrance Notes

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Mango Mango
Strawberry Leaf Strawberry Leaf
Iced Lemon Iced Lemon

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Whipped Cream Whipped Cream
Coconut Coconut
Ginger Ginger

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Fruity Notes Fruity Notes
Musk Musk
Precious Woods Precious Woods
Unique Character

Keep Glazed The House Of Oud by The House of Oud 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

Keep Glazed The House Of Oud embodies the distinctive style of The House of Oud while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.

Character Profile

The Alchemist Archetype: Portrait of Keep Glazed The House Of Oud

Essence

At the core of this person’s being lies The Lover-an archetype of passion, indulgence, and aesthetic devotion. They are drawn to the intoxicating richness of Keep Glazed The House of Oud, a fragrance that mirrors their own complexity: sweet yet smoky, opulent yet mysterious. Like the alchemist who transforms base elements into gold, they seek to elevate the sensory into the sublime. Their life is an experiment in pleasure, a pursuit of beauty in all its forms.

Yet, The Lover is not merely a hedonist. Their appreciation for fragrance is a philosophical act-a way of curating experience, of marking moments with scent as one might underline passages in a cherished book. They do not merely wear a perfume; they embody it, allowing it to shape their presence and interactions.

Style & Aesthetic

Their tastes are baroque in sensibility but refined in execution. They favor textures that beg to be touched-velvet, silk, aged leather-and colors that whisper of decadence: deep burgundies, molten golds, midnight blues. Their home is a sanctuary of curated excess: a Persian rug beneath a mid-century armchair, an antique mirror reflecting a modern sculpture, a bookshelf where Baudelaire sits beside Donna Tartt.

They are drawn to contrast-the clash of bitter and sweet, light and shadow. In music, they oscillate between the sultry melancholy of Nina Simone and the structured chaos of Radiohead. In cuisine, they savor the interplay of burnt caramel and sea salt, of smoky mezcal with a citrus twist. Their aesthetic is not about mere luxury but about intentional sensation, each choice a deliberate stroke in the painting of their life.

Their days are structured yet fluid, balancing discipline and indulgence. They rise early, not out of obligation but because dawn’s quiet is its own luxury. Their mornings might begin with black coffee in a hand-thrown ceramic cup, a slow ritual rather than a hurried necessity. Work, if they must engage in it, is treated as an extension of self-expression-whether they are an artist, a designer, or a financier with a secret poetry manuscript in their desk.

But their shadow lurks in excess. The same intensity that fuels their passions can lead to burnout, to nights where one more glass of wine becomes three, where the pursuit of pleasure tips into escapism. They must learn that true mastery of the senses lies not in endless consumption but in knowing when to withdraw.

Philosophy & Values

To them, beauty is not frivolous-it is essential. They reject the puritanical notion that pleasure must be earned or that austerity equals virtue. Instead, they embrace the idea that sensuality is a form of intelligence, a way of knowing the world more deeply. Their philosophy is one of radical presence-they believe in savoring, in lingering, in refusing to let life slip by unexamined.

Yet, this devotion to the senses carries a shadow. They risk becoming enslaved by their own appetites, mistaking the accumulation of exquisite experiences for wisdom. There is a tension between their desire for depth and their attraction to surfaces-between the sacred and the merely sensual.

Relationships

They are magnetic but guarded, drawing others in with their warmth while maintaining an air of mystery. Their relationships are intense, often marked by a near-ritualistic attention to detail-a perfectly chosen gift, a dinner arranged with obsessive care. They love deeply but selectively, and their affections are not easily won.

Yet, their pursuit of the ideal can make them impatient with imperfection. They may discard people who fail to meet their aesthetic or emotional standards, leaving a trail of admirers who felt they were never quite enough. Their shadow is a fear of banality, a terror of being trapped in the ordinary.

Shadow

Beneath The Lover lies The Addict-the part of them that confuses hunger with fulfillment. When unbalanced, they may chase sensation as a substitute for meaning, mistaking intensity for depth. The very qualities that make them enchanting-their magnetism, their refusal to settle-can become prisons if left unchecked.

Yet, in their best moments, they are alchemists of experience, turning the raw material of life into something luminous. Their challenge is to transcend mere appetite and embrace true devotion-not just to beauty, but to the soul beneath it.

In the end, they are a paradox: both the feast and the one who savors it. And perhaps that is the most exquisite pleasure of all.