1994 Who Is Elijah
At a glance
Is 1994 Who Is Elijah worth trying?
1994 by Who is Elijah is a Floral fragrance for women and men.
- Best match
- Casual, Evening wear in Spring, Fall
- Performance feel
- Good longevity with Moderate sillage
- Signature profile
- rose, white floral, woody with Sandalwood, Rose, Jasmine
The first impression
1994 by Who is Elijah is a Floral fragrance for women and men. 1994 was launched in 2018. The nose behind this fragrance is Raquel Bouris.
What shapes the scent
The perfumer behind it
Raquel Bouris
Raquel Bouris is the founder and perfumer of the Australian niche brand Who is Elijah. She creates fragrances that are inspired by nature and modern minimalism, often using sustainable and natural ingredients. Her collection includes scents like Haze, Muse, and Nightcap, which are designed to be unisex and evoke a sense of calm and sophistication.
Notes pyramid
The mood it creates
The Mystic Archetype: Portrait of 1994 Who Is Elijah
Essence
The Mystic dwells in veiled realms, their consciousness drifting between rose petals and sandalwood smoke. 1994 embodies this archetype-a fragrance that feels less composed than channeled, where jasmine and rose vibrate at the frequency of half-remembered dreams. They are the person who hears constellations hum.
Style & Aesthetic
They dress in layers of meaning: a vintage slip worn as outerwear, a man's shirt knotted at the waist to reveal zodiac tattoos. Their aesthetic is palimpsestic-faded floral wallpaper glimpsed beneath peeling paint, a single earring made from a grandmother's broken rosary bead.
Philosophy & Values
They believe in the porousness of time. The year 1994 isn't past but parallel, its roses still blooming in some dimension they access through meditation. Their spirituality is syncretic-sandalwood incense burning beside Catholic votives, tarot cards shuffled with Buddhist mantras.
Relationships
They connect through shared visions more than small talk. Lovers must understand that their body is just one incarnation-their true self flickers between lifetimes, often lingering in the powdery warmth between base notes.
Lifestyle
Their days follow lunar rhythms: collecting rosewater at dawn, sketching mandalas in the margins of utility bills. Their home is a temple to liminality-a clawfoot tub for ritual baths, a closet where every garment holds the ghost of a former self.
Shadow
Their detachment can become dissociation. The woody-floral duality hints at their struggle to fully incarnate-sometimes preferring the company of spirits to flesh-and-blood humans who demand mundane presence.
Conclusion
1994 is the scent of a love letter found decades later, rose-scented ink still pulsing with heartbeat. It doesn't distinguish between memory and premonition, between the sandalwood rosary in your hands and the one you'll hold in another life.