Namasoma Organic Oud Ensar Oud

Unisex
Parfum/Extrait
Year: Unknown

At a glance

Is Namasoma Organic Oud Ensar Oud worth trying?

Namasoma Organic Oud by Ensar Oud is a Oriental Woody fragrance for women and men.

Best match
Evening wear in Winter
Performance feel
Excellent longevity with Strong sillage
Signature profile
animalic, oud, woody with Cambodian Oud, Thailand Oud

The first impression

Namasoma Organic Oud by Ensar Oud is a Oriental Woody fragrance for women and men.

What shapes the scent

animalic 100%
oud 85%
woody 70%
warm spicy 60%

The perfumer behind it

Ensar Oud

Ensar Oud

Ensar Oud specializes in rich, opulent oud-based fragrances with a focus on rare and high-quality ingredients. His compositions often explore deep, resinous, and woody profiles with intense longevity. He is known for pushing boundaries in niche perfumery with daring blends. His work reflects a passion for traditional and modern oud craftsmanship.

Notes pyramid

All Notes

Complete scent profile

Cambodian Oud Cambodian Oud
Thailand Oud Thailand Oud

The mood it creates

The Alchemist Archetype: Portrait of Namasoma Organic Oud Ensar Oud

Essence

The person who chooses Namasoma Organic Oud Ensar Oud is not merely selecting a fragrance-they are invoking an ancient alchemy of the senses. Their archetype is The Alchemist, a seeker of depth, transformation, and hidden meaning. Like the rare, resinous oud at the heart of their scent, they are drawn to the sacred, the complex, and the enigmatic. They do not wear perfume; they embody it, allowing its smoky, woody richness to become an extension of their aura.

The Alchemist is one who transmutes the mundane into the extraordinary. They are not content with surface pleasures; they crave the layered, the mysterious, the things that must be deciphered. Their life is an experiment in refinement-whether in thought, aesthetics, or experience.

Shadow

Yet, the Alchemist is not without their flaws. Their pursuit of depth can become a retreat from the ordinary world, leaving them isolated in their own esoteric realm. They may grow impatient with those who do not share their sensibilities, dismissing simpler pleasures as "unrefined." This is their shadow-a subtle arrogance, a belief that they alone understand the true nature of things.

Their obsession with meaning can also become a burden. Where others see a sunset, they see impermanence; where others hear music, they hear the echoes of lost time. This sensitivity, while profound, can make them melancholic, prone to overthinking and withdrawal.

Conclusion

Their tastes are deliberate, almost ritualistic. They prefer the weight of aged paper in a book, the texture of handwoven fabrics, the slow burn of a single-malt whiskey. Their home is a sanctuary of curated objects-antique brass, dark woods, incense lingering in the air. They do not follow trends; they follow intuition, collecting pieces that resonate with an inner frequency few can hear.

In philosophy, they are drawn to paradoxes-the coexistence of shadow and light, the tension between decay and rebirth. They might find wisdom in the writings of Rumi, Nietzsche, or the Tao Te Ching, but they distrust dogma. Truth, for them, is something to be distilled, not handed down.