Breath Of God Lush

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2010

At a glance

Is Breath Of God Lush worth trying?

Breath Of God by Lush is a Oriental Woody fragrance for women and men.

Best match
Evening wear in Fall, Winter
Performance feel
Good longevity with Moderate sillage
Signature profile
woody, aromatic, amber with Incense, Melon, Virginia Cedar

The first impression

Breath Of God by Lush is a Oriental Woody fragrance for women and men. Breath Of God was launched in 2010. The nose behind this fragrance is Simon Constantine.

What shapes the scent

woody 100%
aromatic 85%
amber 70%
fresh spicy 60%
smoky 50%
warm spicy 40%
balsamic 35%
citrus 30%
fresh 25%
ozonic 20%

The perfumer behind it

Simon Constantine

Simon Constantine

Simon Constantine is a British perfumer known for his work with Lush and its sister brand B Never Too Busy To Be Beautiful. He is the son of Lush co-founder Mark Constantine and has created many of the brand's iconic fragrances, including Breath Of God and Cardamom Coffee. His style often features natural and ethically sourced ingredients, with a focus on bold, unconventional combinations. Constantine's work reflects Lush's commitment to fresh, handmade products.

Notes pyramid

All Notes

Complete scent profile

Incense Incense
Melon Melon
Virginia Cedar Virginia Cedar
Vetiver Vetiver
Sandalwood Sandalwood
Juniper Juniper
Black Pepper Black Pepper
Amalfi Lemon Amalfi Lemon
Neroli Neroli
Ylang-Ylang Ylang-Ylang
Grapefruit Grapefruit
Rose Rose

The mood it creates

The Mystic Archetype: Portrait of Breath Of God Lush

Essence

The Mystic archetype seeks transcendence through sensory experience, dissolving boundaries between the sacred and the earthly. Breath Of God embodies this duality with its smoky incense and crisp melon, a paradox of fire and water that evokes ritual and revelation. The fragrance is a meditation in motion, where vetiver and sandalwood root the ethereal in the tangible.

Style & Aesthetic

They favor draped silhouettes in raw linen or hammered silk, textures that whisper of ancient temples and desert winds. Their accessories are talismanic-tarnished silver rings, prayer beads strung with rough amber. Every detail is intentional, a curated relic from a pilgrimage only they remember.

Philosophy & Values

For them, truth is found in contrasts: darkness illuminates, silence speaks. They reject dogma but revere mystery, finding divinity in the juniper’s prick and the lemon’s sting. Their spirituality is elemental, built on the alchemy of cedar transforming smoke into breath.

Relationships

They draw seekers and skeptics alike, their presence both comforting and unsettling. Romantic partners are chosen for their ability to dwell in ambiguity, to love the questions as much as the answers. Friendships are deep but intermittent, like incense trails dissipating at dawn.

Lifestyle

Dawn is their sacred hour, spent in rituals of tea and stillness. They journal in cipher, collect odd stones, and keep a vial of black pepper beside their bed to ward off stagnation. Their home is spare but potent-a single painting, a low altar of driftwood and resin.

Shadow

Their reverence for mystery can tip into obscurantism, using ambiguity as armor. When unbalanced, they become the hermit who mistakes isolation for enlightenment, the smoke so thick it chokes.

Conclusion

Breath Of God is an olfactory mandala-meant to be contemplated, then released. Like the Mystic, it exists in the liminal, where pepper and rose, melon and myrrh, are no longer opposites but a single exhalation.