Durga
Palatial doses of the finest floral absolutes—tuberose, orris butter, orange blossom, sambac jasmine, chrysanthemum, and ylang. Unimaginably narcotic. The D.S. & Durga gold label line employs copious amounts of the rarest, finest perfume materials. It is limited to small, hand-made batches, driven by the scarcity of rare natural ingredients.
Kavi and I both love the flower tuberose. It was the scent of Kavi’s early visits to Delhi. Her uncle would place fresh tuberose flowers next to her bed every day. The tuberose flower is creamy white, green, and narcotic. While most people would love the smell of the flower, many do not like tuberose perfumes. Often when it is recreated as a perfume, it comes out sugary, soapy, or cloying. Tuberose absolute is prohibitively expensive, thus many “tuberose” perfumes have little or none of the absolute in them. Durga uses the most amount of tuberose absolute I have ever seen used in a perfume. The supporting cast only adds to its richness. This scent is the pinnacle of what we do. It is a scent excited about the materials we as perfumers live and search for. I can see why Jean Patou named the fragrance Joy. Sometimes it is just that simple.
- D.S.
Perfumer(s): David Seth Moltz
Notes: green tuberose, melon, chrysanthemum, ylang ylang, orris butter, orange blossom, tuberose absolute, jasmine sambac, fine musk
Our products are shipped via UPS and require a physical mailing address. (No PO boxes, please!) Further questions on shipping and delivery? Click here to see our FAQ page.
Palatial doses of the finest floral absolutes—tuberose, orris butter, orange blossom, sambac jasmine, chrysanthemum, and ylang. Unimaginably narcotic. The D.S. & Durga gold label line employs copious amounts of the rarest, finest perfume materials. It is limited to small, hand-made batches, driven by the scarcity of rare natural ingredients.
Kavi and I both love the flower tuberose. It was the scent of Kavi’s early visits to Delhi. Her uncle would place fresh tuberose flowers next to her bed every day. The tuberose flower is creamy white, green, and narcotic. While most people would love the smell of the flower, many do not like tuberose perfumes. Often when it is recreated as a perfume, it comes out sugary, soapy, or cloying. Tuberose absolute is prohibitively expensive, thus many “tuberose” perfumes have little or none of the absolute in them. Durga uses the most amount of tuberose absolute I have ever seen used in a perfume. The supporting cast only adds to its richness. This scent is the pinnacle of what we do. It is a scent excited about the materials we as perfumers live and search for. I can see why Jean Patou named the fragrance Joy. Sometimes it is just that simple.
- D.S.
Perfumer(s): David Seth Moltz
Notes: green tuberose, melon, chrysanthemum, ylang ylang, orris butter, orange blossom, tuberose absolute, jasmine sambac, fine musk
Our products are shipped via UPS and require a physical mailing address. (No PO boxes, please!) Further questions on shipping and delivery? Click here to see our FAQ page.