Aquatic/Ozonic/Marine/Oceanic/Fresh
This fragrance category is another one in which the language of perfumery is somewhat muddled and confusing. Many writers combine all of these notes together into one family and call all of them by a single name such as 'Aquatic' or 'Marine' or 'Oceanic,' while others separate them into different groups. And still others divide this Aquatic lineage into several subgroups depending upon their dominant characters, such as Aquatic Aromatic, Aquatic Woody, Floral Oceanic-Aquatic, Aromatic Oceanic-Aquatic, and Woody Oceanic-Aquatic.
These fragrances generally provide a watery, fresh-citrusy, limpid sense with a subtle beginning and a feeling of lightness and what might be termed timidity. The tone frequently is characterized by a combination of 'watery fruit' (watermelon, cucumber, rhubarb) and gentle florals like water hyacinth, along with touches of citrus and mint or peppermint.
Because there is so much confusion and overlap regarding these categories of scent, I will try to discuss them in a way that approaches from specific different angles or viewpoints. Some of the same pefume fragrances appear in more than one area because of this, but I think the overall meanings will be clear.
Aquatic
A general description of aquatic fragrances is that they "take the feeling of that perfect beach day and put it in a bottle, capturing the essence of waves crashing on the shore," evoking a sense of a water environment, but not all of them salty. They are clean, light and crisp, helping you to feel cool on hot summer days. They have fragrance notes simulating aromas of seawater or freshwater, with a slight suggestion of mint. Their aromas mix in a complex manner to provide a smell that is a 'balanced combination of lightness and heaviness.' Some aquatic fragrances can have tremendous sillage and longevity due to their marine-based accords. They generally do not follow the traditional pyramid structure and are much more linear in their life cycles.
Aquatic colognes first appeared on the market with the release of Davidoff Cool Water (1988) and Christian Dior Dune (1991), heralding a wave of new fragrances which used recent advances in synthetic technology to create scents distinguished by marine-like tones. They were created primarily to have androgynous properties, appealing to both sexes. This ability to mimic salty, oceanic smells was due to new chemicals such as calone 1951, discovered and synthesized by chemists at a division of Pfizer in 1951 and first marketed in 1966. Calone had a fresh, green, metallic smell, a scent of watermelon and sea spray, with notes of geranium and amber and a light touch of oyster. For the next 20 years, while people preferred perfumes with powerful and opulent notes, calone was just a marginal perfume ingredient, used mainly in trace amounts for floral accords. However, when its patent expired, other perfumers started working more creatively with it and other similar synthetics, and their use in fragrances exploded. In 1992, Japanese fashion designer Issey Miyake, wanting "a fragrance that smells like water," created l'Eau d'Issey, a marine fragrance which very quickly became a global success.
Other more recent aquatic-marine synthetics include helional, used in soaps and laundry detergents as well as perfumes; aquozone, a scent created by Firmenich and included as a top note in Giorgio Armani Acqua di Gio Profundo, melonal from Givaudan (described as "green, sweet, oily, powerful, melon rind-like, with cucumber and floral nuances"), floralozone ("fresh, clean, aldehydic, with jasmine, reminiscent of ocean breezes"), algenone (with white flower, watery-soapy, and animalic facets), and transluzone (a calone derivative, somewhat less marine and more floral). Similar newer synthetics include cascalone (ozonic, aldehydic, more intense than calone), aldolone (also ozonic and aldehydic and easier to use because it balances easily), and azurone (stronger and more diffusive). Compounds quite similar to the original calone but with a much more intense odor include calone 124 (fruity and with no oyster note) and calone 219 (greener and metallic).
However, synthesis is not the only way that aquatic facets are added; some natural plants, such as lotus, blue cypress, sea fennel, algae, and oakmoss, provide marine-salty notes to compositions, and fruits are sometimes added to bring an additional aqueous touch.
With the popularity of aquatics in the 1990s, perfume houses saw an opportunity to dilute their fragrances with cheap alcohol and call them 'aquatic' variants to appeal to the prevailing taste of the time, while charging the same high prices. But in the first decade of the 21st century, their popularity was overtaken by the 'gourmands' and 'fruity florals,' and over the last 10 years of increased economic hard times they have definitely become less popular. Many of the aquatic fragrances have now been reformulated to decrease their 'marine freshness,' and some of them, such as Calvin Klein Escape, have lost it entirely.
Subgroups:
- Aquatic Aromatic scents, with fresh watery accords, are quite numerous. Aromatic Oceanic-Aquatic fragrances are similar but have stronger tones of ocean seawater and beach, with nuances of drying seashells and sea grasses.
These groups include Abercrombie & Fitch Summer and Fierce Blue, Al-Rehab Orient, Avon Homem Acqua and Exploration, Azzaro Chrome Aqua and Aqua Frost, Brut Aquatonic and Oceans, Burberry Sport Ice for Men, Bvlgari Aqva pour Homme, Calvin Klein Eternity for Men Summer 2006 and 2016, Carolina Herrera Aqua, Cartier Declaration l'Eau, Davidoff Cool Water (and variations), Dolce & Gabbana Light Blue Swimming in Lipari, Ermenegildo Zegna Z Fresh, Giorgio Armani Acqua di Gio (and variations), Givenchy Insense Ultramarine Wild Surf and Pi Neo Tropical Paradise, Hugo Boss Iced and Now, Joop! Homme Sport, L'Occitane en Provence Verdon and Bois Flotte, Lacoste L.12.12 Eau Fraiche and Live, Louis Cardin La Viola Homme and Screen, Nautica Aqua Rush and Blue, Pecksniff's Aquamarine, Penhaligon's Blasted Heath, Perry Ellis Aqua, Ralph Lauren Polo Deep Blue, Rasasi Hawas for Him, Tommy Bahama Maritime for Him and Set Sail Martinique, Truefitt & Hill Clubman, Williams Aqua Velva Ice Blue and Ice Sport, Yardley Legacy, Yves St. Laurent l'Homme Cologne Bleue, Zara 10.0 and Deep Blue Sea, and many others.
- Aquatic Woody compositions also are common. They include wood notes in addition to the aquatic ones and often are rich and exotic, with tints of sun-warmed wet, decaying woods. The related Woody Oceanic-Aquatic have additional accords of seawater and sometimes seaweed. Common notes in the latter group include lemon and bergamot, as well as amber, cedar, and sandalwood.
Those for men in these groups include Dunhill Desire Blue Ocean, Antonio Puig Agua Brava Sea Power, Aramis Always for Him, Avon Aqua for Him, Azzaro Bright Visit and Chrome Sport, Bentley for Men Azure, Brut Revolution, Burberry Brit Splash for Men, Bvlgari Aqva Amara, Calvin Klein Eternity for Men Summer 2013, Carolina Herrera 212 Men Aqua, Cartier Declaration Bois Bleu, Davidoff Cool Water Wave, Dolce & Gabbana Light Blue Eau Intense pour Homme, Giorgio Armani Acqua di Gio Absolu Instinct and Acqua di Gio Blue Edition, Guerlain l'Homme Ideal Sport, Hugo Boss Pure, Issey Miyake l'Eau d'Issey pour Homme, Jil Sander Sun Bath Men, Lalique Encre Noire Sport, Nautica Voyage, Paco Rabanne Invictus, Pino Silvestre Mediterraneo, Ralph Lauren Holiday Bear Edition Polo Blue, Rasasi Hope Men, Thierry Mugler Alien Man Mirage, Tommy Bahama Very Cool, Versace Man Eau Fraiche, Yves St. Laurent Kouros Energizing 2010 and Kouros Tattoo, and Zara Dark Crude.
- Floral Aquatic compositions have notes of aquatic flowers (such as water lily, pickerel weed, water hawthorn, and lotus) and herbs (watercress, pennywort, mint, water spinach) in addition to those of water. Floral Oceanic-Aquatic perfumes also have seawater tones.
Fragrances in these two groups are much more common in women's products, but the few for men include Ajmal Blu, Atelier Ulric Classic for Men, Nadia Z Japanese Spring, Ottaniqo Falconer Forest, Phytoderm Domini, Reminiscence Rem pour Homme, Roberto Capucci Nuance, Royal Hawaiian Kane Sport, and VFiles Homme.
Among the perfumes with an oceanic tone are some that could be termed 'cool oceanic,' a relatively new variety with a wider scheme that might include the scent of fresh linen or suggestions of clean, snowy mountains. Examples are the various Davidoff Cool Water editions, Narciso Rodriguez Essence, Creed Himalaya and Silver Mountain Water, and Abdul Samad Al Qurashi Oceanic Fresh.
Ozonic
Another group that is similar to Aquatics is the Ozonic fragrances. The word 'ozonic' is used to describe aroma chemicals that are meant to mimic the smell of clean fresh air, frequently described as the smell of the air right after a thunderstorm. They have light, somewhat elusive, marine but earthy notes suggesting recent rain or fresh morning dew. Usually they are included among the base notes of a composition, where they provide crispness and coolness that often simulates sea air. They typically are mixed with floral, fruity, or woodsy notes to accent, brighten, and lift them. Ozonic perfumes have gentle, alluring scents that are not overpowering even during warm times when the perfume evaporates easily. They are extremely versatile, appropriate for either casual or formal occasions.
There are three major components to the classic ozonic smell.
First is ozone chemical itself, an unstable molecule composed of three oxygen atoms. It is created when an electrical charge from lightning splits atmospheric nitrogen and oxygen molecules into separate atoms, some recombining into dinitrogen oxide or nitric oxide, which in turn reacts with other atmospheric chemicals to produce O3.
The second factor is petrichor, an earthy aroma produced when rain falls on dry soil. This smell comes from an oil exuded by certain plants during dry periods, during which the oil is absorbed into clay-based soils and rocks. During rain striking the ground, this oil is released into the air with the petrichor odor.
And finally, the third component is the musty aroma of geosmin, a metabolic by-product of bacteria or blue-green algae in damp earth. Together these three factors produce the distinctive overall ozonic scent.
The term ozonic is somewhat divisive, with some experts proposing that it is just the same general group as the Aquatic family and Oceanic group. Others distinguish among them, saying that Aquatic and Oceanic refer specifically to beach, watery, or 'wet flower' notes, reminiscent of a pond, lake, or sea (usually due to inclusion of a synthetic like calone, such as in Acqua di Gio and Bvlgari Aqva); while ozonic scents, on the other hand, are more airy, often with a piercing dry note that is like inhaling very cold air or oxygen (a quality of Lanvin Oxygen or Aqua Quorum). In addition, increasing numbers of people object to any use of the term 'ozonic' in perfumery since ozone itself, at high enough concentrations, is harmful to the respiratory tract and actually has nothing to do directly with fresh, clean air. In fact, the smell of the air after a thunderstorm has passed over a city has more to do with chemical reactions with air and ground pollution than with factors from the earth.
Masculine fragrances with significant Aquatic/Ozonic/Marine accords:
(with the predominant character in parentheses)
Abercrombie & Fitch First Instinct (watery/airy)
Acqua di Parma Blu Mediterraneo Fico di Amalfi (marine), Arancia di Capri (watery/airy)
Amouage Portrayl Man (ozonic)
Avon Maxx, Wild Country Musk, 015 London (ozonic)
Azzaro Chrome Intense (ozonic), Chrome United (watery/airy)
Bath & Bodny Works Ocean (ozonic)
Bentley Azure (ozonic), Silverlake (watery/airy), Momentum Unlimited (watery/airy)
Bvlgari Aqva Atlantiqve (marine), Aqva Marine (marine), Aqva Amara
By Kilian Roses on Ice (ozonic)
Calvin Klein Eternity Air (ozonic), One Summer 2019 (watery/airy), Eternity, Eternity Aqua
Caron Nuit Fraiche (ozonic)
Christian Dior Balade Sauvage (ozonic)
Creed Green Irish Tweed (ozonic), Virgin Island Water (marine), Millesime Imperial
Davidoff Cool Water Wave (marine), Cool Water
Diesel Fuel for Life He Summer (ozonic)
Dior Fahrenheit (ozonic)
Dolce & Gabbana Light Blue Sun (ozonic), Light Blue Intense (watery/airy)
Dunhill Pure (watery/airy)
Ermenegildo Zegna Uomo (ozonic)
Faberlic Favorite
Fendi Fan di Acqua
Giorgio Armani Acqua di Gio Profondo, AdG, AdG Essenze, AdG Profumo
Hugo Boss Bottled United
Isssey Miyake l'Eau d'Issey Sport (watery/airy)
Jil Sander Sun Men Fizz (ozonic)
Jo Malone Wood Sage & Sea Salt (marine)
Lalique Hommage a l'Homme (ozonic)
Lanvin Eclat d'Arpege (watery/airy)
Michael Kors Extreme Sky (ozonic)
Narciso Rodriguez (ozonic)
Nautica Voyage
Paco Rabanne 1 Million Luck (ozonic), Invictus Aqua
Paul Smith Essential (ozonic)
Porsche Design Palladium (ozonic)
Ralph Lauren Polo Blue (watery/airy), Polo Sport
Rasasi Hawas (watery/airy)
Salvatore Ferragamo Uomo Urban Feel (ozonic), Acqua Essenziale
Tom Ford Oud Minerale
Tommy Bahama St. Barts
Versace pour Homme (watery/airy)
Yves St. Laurent l'Homme le Parfum (ozonic), l'Homme Libre (watery/airy)
Zara Aquatic Mind (marine), Night (marine), Unbreakable
These are just some of the most popular ones. In addition, there are a lot of unisex fragrances, too many to list.
Fresh
A closely related fragrance family - or simply a different approach to classification - which many incorporate into the Aquatic family, is the Fresh family. It is quite varied and somewhat poorly defined, ranging from fruity, green, aquatic, and citrus through aromatic. Unlike other categories, it is not based on a single defining characteristic but rather on its overall fresh, lively, invigorating quality. Many but not all of the accords in this family are found primarily in summer perfumes.
Types of notes:
- Fresh fruity notes often include those of peaches, pears, apples, guava, mango, pineapple, melon, and passion fruit, lusher than citrus notes. Their freshness is softened with a light, sensual touch of sweetness.
- Fresh green notes include green leaves (such as violet leaf), tea leaves, vines, and fresh cut grass. Clean and like a breath of fresh air through an open window, occasionally with a whisper of fruit, they evoke the sense of a cool, shaded spot. They are longer lasting than others in the Fresh family.
- Fresh aquatic notes include marine, calone, seaweed, and driftwood. The most refreshing of the groups, these are the ones most often also termed 'ozonic,' displaying synthetic ingredients identified and developed through headspace technology. The majority of these scents are created for men.
- Fresh citruses include lemon, neroli, mandarin, lime, bergamot, and grapefruit. With simple elegance and crispness ('like a perfectly-ironed white shirt in a bottle'), these are often used in unisex compositions. They tend to be short-lived on the skin, especially on warm days.
- Fresh aromatic notes include thyme, tarragon, rosemary, eucalyptus, lavender, and sage. Airy and outdoorsy, more masculine than feminine, these notes blend well with citruses.
Popular examples of fragrances that might be included in the Fresh group (some in other families, as well):
Acqua di Gio Profumo
Azzaro Chrome Legend
Bath & Body Works White Citrus
Burberry Weekend
Bvlgari Man in Black, Wood Neroli, Aqua Amara
Byredo Mister Marvelous
Calvin Klein Eternity Aqua, CK One
Chanel Bleu, Allure Sport Extreme
Christian Dior Sauvage
Creed Orange Spice, Aventus, Virgin Island Water
Diesel Only the Brave
Dolce & Gabbana The One Royal Night, Light Blue Intense
Dunhill Icon Absolute, Desire Black
Giorgio Armani Code Ice
Gucci Guilty
Hermes Terre d'Hermes
Hugo Boss The Scent Absolute, Hugo Element
Jimmy Choo Man
Jo Malone Pomegranate Noir
Kenneth Cole Mankind
Kenzo 'Eau pour HommeLanvin l'Homme
Lanvin l'Homme
Liz Claiborne Curve
Nautica Voyage
Nikos Sculpture pour Homme
Paco Rabanne 1 Million Intense
Prada Luna Rossa Sport, l'Homme
Puig Yacht Man Blue
Ralph Lauren Polo Red Extreme
S.T. Dupont pour Homme
Shisedo Zen
Tom Ford Neroli Portofino Aqua
Versace Dylan Blue
Yves St. Laurent Y, l'Homme Ultime
This fragrance category is another one in which the language of perfumery is somewhat muddled and confusing. Many writers combine all of these notes together into one family and call all of them by a single name such as 'Aquatic' or 'Marine' or 'Oceanic,' while others separate them into different groups. And still others divide this Aquatic lineage into several subgroups depending upon their dominant characters, such as Aquatic Aromatic, Aquatic Woody, Floral Oceanic-Aquatic, Aromatic Oceanic-Aquatic, and Woody Oceanic-Aquatic.
These fragrances generally provide a watery, fresh-citrusy, limpid sense with a subtle beginning and a feeling of lightness and what might be termed timidity. The tone frequently is characterized by a combination of 'watery fruit' (watermelon, cucumber, rhubarb) and gentle florals like water hyacinth, along with touches of citrus and mint or peppermint.
Because there is so much confusion and overlap regarding these categories of scent, I will try to discuss them in a way that approaches from specific different angles or viewpoints. Some of the same pefume fragrances appear in more than one area because of this, but I think the overall meanings will be clear.
Aquatic
A general description of aquatic fragrances is that they "take the feeling of that perfect beach day and put it in a bottle, capturing the essence of waves crashing on the shore," evoking a sense of a water environment, but not all of them salty. They are clean, light and crisp, helping you to feel cool on hot summer days. They have fragrance notes simulating aromas of seawater or freshwater, with a slight suggestion of mint. Their aromas mix in a complex manner to provide a smell that is a 'balanced combination of lightness and heaviness.' Some aquatic fragrances can have tremendous sillage and longevity due to their marine-based accords. They generally do not follow the traditional pyramid structure and are much more linear in their life cycles.
Aquatic colognes first appeared on the market with the release of Davidoff Cool Water (1988) and Christian Dior Dune (1991), heralding a wave of new fragrances which used recent advances in synthetic technology to create scents distinguished by marine-like tones. They were created primarily to have androgynous properties, appealing to both sexes. This ability to mimic salty, oceanic smells was due to new chemicals such as calone 1951, discovered and synthesized by chemists at a division of Pfizer in 1951 and first marketed in 1966. Calone had a fresh, green, metallic smell, a scent of watermelon and sea spray, with notes of geranium and amber and a light touch of oyster. For the next 20 years, while people preferred perfumes with powerful and opulent notes, calone was just a marginal perfume ingredient, used mainly in trace amounts for floral accords. However, when its patent expired, other perfumers started working more creatively with it and other similar synthetics, and their use in fragrances exploded. In 1992, Japanese fashion designer Issey Miyake, wanting "a fragrance that smells like water," created l'Eau d'Issey, a marine fragrance which very quickly became a global success.
Other more recent aquatic-marine synthetics include helional, used in soaps and laundry detergents as well as perfumes; aquozone, a scent created by Firmenich and included as a top note in Giorgio Armani Acqua di Gio Profundo, melonal from Givaudan (described as "green, sweet, oily, powerful, melon rind-like, with cucumber and floral nuances"), floralozone ("fresh, clean, aldehydic, with jasmine, reminiscent of ocean breezes"), algenone (with white flower, watery-soapy, and animalic facets), and transluzone (a calone derivative, somewhat less marine and more floral). Similar newer synthetics include cascalone (ozonic, aldehydic, more intense than calone), aldolone (also ozonic and aldehydic and easier to use because it balances easily), and azurone (stronger and more diffusive). Compounds quite similar to the original calone but with a much more intense odor include calone 124 (fruity and with no oyster note) and calone 219 (greener and metallic).
However, synthesis is not the only way that aquatic facets are added; some natural plants, such as lotus, blue cypress, sea fennel, algae, and oakmoss, provide marine-salty notes to compositions, and fruits are sometimes added to bring an additional aqueous touch.
With the popularity of aquatics in the 1990s, perfume houses saw an opportunity to dilute their fragrances with cheap alcohol and call them 'aquatic' variants to appeal to the prevailing taste of the time, while charging the same high prices. But in the first decade of the 21st century, their popularity was overtaken by the 'gourmands' and 'fruity florals,' and over the last 10 years of increased economic hard times they have definitely become less popular. Many of the aquatic fragrances have now been reformulated to decrease their 'marine freshness,' and some of them, such as Calvin Klein Escape, have lost it entirely.
Subgroups:
- Aquatic Aromatic scents, with fresh watery accords, are quite numerous. Aromatic Oceanic-Aquatic fragrances are similar but have stronger tones of ocean seawater and beach, with nuances of drying seashells and sea grasses.
These groups include Abercrombie & Fitch Summer and Fierce Blue, Al-Rehab Orient, Avon Homem Acqua and Exploration, Azzaro Chrome Aqua and Aqua Frost, Brut Aquatonic and Oceans, Burberry Sport Ice for Men, Bvlgari Aqva pour Homme, Calvin Klein Eternity for Men Summer 2006 and 2016, Carolina Herrera Aqua, Cartier Declaration l'Eau, Davidoff Cool Water (and variations), Dolce & Gabbana Light Blue Swimming in Lipari, Ermenegildo Zegna Z Fresh, Giorgio Armani Acqua di Gio (and variations), Givenchy Insense Ultramarine Wild Surf and Pi Neo Tropical Paradise, Hugo Boss Iced and Now, Joop! Homme Sport, L'Occitane en Provence Verdon and Bois Flotte, Lacoste L.12.12 Eau Fraiche and Live, Louis Cardin La Viola Homme and Screen, Nautica Aqua Rush and Blue, Pecksniff's Aquamarine, Penhaligon's Blasted Heath, Perry Ellis Aqua, Ralph Lauren Polo Deep Blue, Rasasi Hawas for Him, Tommy Bahama Maritime for Him and Set Sail Martinique, Truefitt & Hill Clubman, Williams Aqua Velva Ice Blue and Ice Sport, Yardley Legacy, Yves St. Laurent l'Homme Cologne Bleue, Zara 10.0 and Deep Blue Sea, and many others.
- Aquatic Woody compositions also are common. They include wood notes in addition to the aquatic ones and often are rich and exotic, with tints of sun-warmed wet, decaying woods. The related Woody Oceanic-Aquatic have additional accords of seawater and sometimes seaweed. Common notes in the latter group include lemon and bergamot, as well as amber, cedar, and sandalwood.
Those for men in these groups include Dunhill Desire Blue Ocean, Antonio Puig Agua Brava Sea Power, Aramis Always for Him, Avon Aqua for Him, Azzaro Bright Visit and Chrome Sport, Bentley for Men Azure, Brut Revolution, Burberry Brit Splash for Men, Bvlgari Aqva Amara, Calvin Klein Eternity for Men Summer 2013, Carolina Herrera 212 Men Aqua, Cartier Declaration Bois Bleu, Davidoff Cool Water Wave, Dolce & Gabbana Light Blue Eau Intense pour Homme, Giorgio Armani Acqua di Gio Absolu Instinct and Acqua di Gio Blue Edition, Guerlain l'Homme Ideal Sport, Hugo Boss Pure, Issey Miyake l'Eau d'Issey pour Homme, Jil Sander Sun Bath Men, Lalique Encre Noire Sport, Nautica Voyage, Paco Rabanne Invictus, Pino Silvestre Mediterraneo, Ralph Lauren Holiday Bear Edition Polo Blue, Rasasi Hope Men, Thierry Mugler Alien Man Mirage, Tommy Bahama Very Cool, Versace Man Eau Fraiche, Yves St. Laurent Kouros Energizing 2010 and Kouros Tattoo, and Zara Dark Crude.
- Floral Aquatic compositions have notes of aquatic flowers (such as water lily, pickerel weed, water hawthorn, and lotus) and herbs (watercress, pennywort, mint, water spinach) in addition to those of water. Floral Oceanic-Aquatic perfumes also have seawater tones.
Fragrances in these two groups are much more common in women's products, but the few for men include Ajmal Blu, Atelier Ulric Classic for Men, Nadia Z Japanese Spring, Ottaniqo Falconer Forest, Phytoderm Domini, Reminiscence Rem pour Homme, Roberto Capucci Nuance, Royal Hawaiian Kane Sport, and VFiles Homme.
Among the perfumes with an oceanic tone are some that could be termed 'cool oceanic,' a relatively new variety with a wider scheme that might include the scent of fresh linen or suggestions of clean, snowy mountains. Examples are the various Davidoff Cool Water editions, Narciso Rodriguez Essence, Creed Himalaya and Silver Mountain Water, and Abdul Samad Al Qurashi Oceanic Fresh.
Ozonic
Another group that is similar to Aquatics is the Ozonic fragrances. The word 'ozonic' is used to describe aroma chemicals that are meant to mimic the smell of clean fresh air, frequently described as the smell of the air right after a thunderstorm. They have light, somewhat elusive, marine but earthy notes suggesting recent rain or fresh morning dew. Usually they are included among the base notes of a composition, where they provide crispness and coolness that often simulates sea air. They typically are mixed with floral, fruity, or woodsy notes to accent, brighten, and lift them. Ozonic perfumes have gentle, alluring scents that are not overpowering even during warm times when the perfume evaporates easily. They are extremely versatile, appropriate for either casual or formal occasions.
There are three major components to the classic ozonic smell.
First is ozone chemical itself, an unstable molecule composed of three oxygen atoms. It is created when an electrical charge from lightning splits atmospheric nitrogen and oxygen molecules into separate atoms, some recombining into dinitrogen oxide or nitric oxide, which in turn reacts with other atmospheric chemicals to produce O3.
The second factor is petrichor, an earthy aroma produced when rain falls on dry soil. This smell comes from an oil exuded by certain plants during dry periods, during which the oil is absorbed into clay-based soils and rocks. During rain striking the ground, this oil is released into the air with the petrichor odor.
And finally, the third component is the musty aroma of geosmin, a metabolic by-product of bacteria or blue-green algae in damp earth. Together these three factors produce the distinctive overall ozonic scent.
The term ozonic is somewhat divisive, with some experts proposing that it is just the same general group as the Aquatic family and Oceanic group. Others distinguish among them, saying that Aquatic and Oceanic refer specifically to beach, watery, or 'wet flower' notes, reminiscent of a pond, lake, or sea (usually due to inclusion of a synthetic like calone, such as in Acqua di Gio and Bvlgari Aqva); while ozonic scents, on the other hand, are more airy, often with a piercing dry note that is like inhaling very cold air or oxygen (a quality of Lanvin Oxygen or Aqua Quorum). In addition, increasing numbers of people object to any use of the term 'ozonic' in perfumery since ozone itself, at high enough concentrations, is harmful to the respiratory tract and actually has nothing to do directly with fresh, clean air. In fact, the smell of the air after a thunderstorm has passed over a city has more to do with chemical reactions with air and ground pollution than with factors from the earth.
Masculine fragrances with significant Aquatic/Ozonic/Marine accords:
(with the predominant character in parentheses)
Abercrombie & Fitch First Instinct (watery/airy)
Acqua di Parma Blu Mediterraneo Fico di Amalfi (marine), Arancia di Capri (watery/airy)
Amouage Portrayl Man (ozonic)
Avon Maxx, Wild Country Musk, 015 London (ozonic)
Azzaro Chrome Intense (ozonic), Chrome United (watery/airy)
Bath & Bodny Works Ocean (ozonic)
Bentley Azure (ozonic), Silverlake (watery/airy), Momentum Unlimited (watery/airy)
Bvlgari Aqva Atlantiqve (marine), Aqva Marine (marine), Aqva Amara
By Kilian Roses on Ice (ozonic)
Calvin Klein Eternity Air (ozonic), One Summer 2019 (watery/airy), Eternity, Eternity Aqua
Caron Nuit Fraiche (ozonic)
Christian Dior Balade Sauvage (ozonic)
Creed Green Irish Tweed (ozonic), Virgin Island Water (marine), Millesime Imperial
Davidoff Cool Water Wave (marine), Cool Water
Diesel Fuel for Life He Summer (ozonic)
Dior Fahrenheit (ozonic)
Dolce & Gabbana Light Blue Sun (ozonic), Light Blue Intense (watery/airy)
Dunhill Pure (watery/airy)
Ermenegildo Zegna Uomo (ozonic)
Faberlic Favorite
Fendi Fan di Acqua
Giorgio Armani Acqua di Gio Profondo, AdG, AdG Essenze, AdG Profumo
Hugo Boss Bottled United
Isssey Miyake l'Eau d'Issey Sport (watery/airy)
Jil Sander Sun Men Fizz (ozonic)
Jo Malone Wood Sage & Sea Salt (marine)
Lalique Hommage a l'Homme (ozonic)
Lanvin Eclat d'Arpege (watery/airy)
Michael Kors Extreme Sky (ozonic)
Narciso Rodriguez (ozonic)
Nautica Voyage
Paco Rabanne 1 Million Luck (ozonic), Invictus Aqua
Paul Smith Essential (ozonic)
Porsche Design Palladium (ozonic)
Ralph Lauren Polo Blue (watery/airy), Polo Sport
Rasasi Hawas (watery/airy)
Salvatore Ferragamo Uomo Urban Feel (ozonic), Acqua Essenziale
Tom Ford Oud Minerale
Tommy Bahama St. Barts
Versace pour Homme (watery/airy)
Yves St. Laurent l'Homme le Parfum (ozonic), l'Homme Libre (watery/airy)
Zara Aquatic Mind (marine), Night (marine), Unbreakable
These are just some of the most popular ones. In addition, there are a lot of unisex fragrances, too many to list.
Fresh
A closely related fragrance family - or simply a different approach to classification - which many incorporate into the Aquatic family, is the Fresh family. It is quite varied and somewhat poorly defined, ranging from fruity, green, aquatic, and citrus through aromatic. Unlike other categories, it is not based on a single defining characteristic but rather on its overall fresh, lively, invigorating quality. Many but not all of the accords in this family are found primarily in summer perfumes.
Types of notes:
- Fresh fruity notes often include those of peaches, pears, apples, guava, mango, pineapple, melon, and passion fruit, lusher than citrus notes. Their freshness is softened with a light, sensual touch of sweetness.
- Fresh green notes include green leaves (such as violet leaf), tea leaves, vines, and fresh cut grass. Clean and like a breath of fresh air through an open window, occasionally with a whisper of fruit, they evoke the sense of a cool, shaded spot. They are longer lasting than others in the Fresh family.
- Fresh aquatic notes include marine, calone, seaweed, and driftwood. The most refreshing of the groups, these are the ones most often also termed 'ozonic,' displaying synthetic ingredients identified and developed through headspace technology. The majority of these scents are created for men.
- Fresh citruses include lemon, neroli, mandarin, lime, bergamot, and grapefruit. With simple elegance and crispness ('like a perfectly-ironed white shirt in a bottle'), these are often used in unisex compositions. They tend to be short-lived on the skin, especially on warm days.
- Fresh aromatic notes include thyme, tarragon, rosemary, eucalyptus, lavender, and sage. Airy and outdoorsy, more masculine than feminine, these notes blend well with citruses.
Popular examples of fragrances that might be included in the Fresh group (some in other families, as well):
Acqua di Gio Profumo
Azzaro Chrome Legend
Bath & Body Works White Citrus
Burberry Weekend
Bvlgari Man in Black, Wood Neroli, Aqua Amara
Byredo Mister Marvelous
Calvin Klein Eternity Aqua, CK One
Chanel Bleu, Allure Sport Extreme
Christian Dior Sauvage
Creed Orange Spice, Aventus, Virgin Island Water
Diesel Only the Brave
Dolce & Gabbana The One Royal Night, Light Blue Intense
Dunhill Icon Absolute, Desire Black
Giorgio Armani Code Ice
Gucci Guilty
Hermes Terre d'Hermes
Hugo Boss The Scent Absolute, Hugo Element
Jimmy Choo Man
Jo Malone Pomegranate Noir
Kenneth Cole Mankind
Kenzo 'Eau pour HommeLanvin l'Homme
Lanvin l'Homme
Liz Claiborne Curve
Nautica Voyage
Nikos Sculpture pour Homme
Paco Rabanne 1 Million Intense
Prada Luna Rossa Sport, l'Homme
Puig Yacht Man Blue
Ralph Lauren Polo Red Extreme
S.T. Dupont pour Homme
Shisedo Zen
Tom Ford Neroli Portofino Aqua
Versace Dylan Blue
Yves St. Laurent Y, l'Homme Ultime
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