Phu Quoc D'annam

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2023
Moderate
Sillage
Good
Longevity
Summer
Best Season
Casual
Best For

Fragrance Story

Phu Quoc by d'Annam is a Oriental Woody fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Phu Quoc was launched in 2023. Phu Quoc was created by Anh Ngo and IFF. Top notes are Citruses, Green Pepper and Galbanum; middle notes are Marine notes, Orange and Lily of the Valley; base notes are Vetiver, Amber and Cedarwood.

Composition Profile

aromatic 100%
marine 85%
citrus 70%
green 60%
salty 50%
fresh 40%
aquatic 35%
fresh spicy 30%

About the Perfumer

Anh Ngo

Anh Ngo

Anh Ngo is a Vietnamese perfumer known for blending natural and synthetic notes with a poetic, narrative-driven approach. Her work for Mischief Academy reimagines classic stories through whimsical, character-inspired scents, while her Oneiros and d'Annam collections explore atmospheric landscapes and cultural memories. She often draws on her heritage and travels, as seen in d'Annam’s Da Lat and Arashiyama, which evoke specific places with subtle, evocative compositions.

Fragrance Notes

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Citruses Citruses
Green Pepper Green Pepper
Galbanum Galbanum

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Marine notes Marine notes
Orange Orange
Lily of the Valley Lily of the Valley

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Vetiver Vetiver
Amber Amber
Cedarwood Cedarwood

Character Profile

The Seeker Archetype: Portrait of Phu Quoc D'annam

Essence

Archetype: The Explorer

The one who wears Phu Quoc D’annam is not merely drawn to a fragrance-they are seduced by the essence of discovery. This scent, with its whispers of salt, spice, and distant shores, is the olfactory embodiment of their restless spirit. They are the Explorer, the archetype that thrives on the uncharted, the rare, the untamed. Their life is a pilgrimage, not necessarily in the physical sense (though they may well be a traveler), but in the way they approach existence itself. They are always searching-for meaning, for beauty, for the next horizon.

Style & Aesthetic

Their aesthetic is one of curated eclecticism. They might wear a linen shirt from a Vietnamese market, a ring bought from a nomadic silversmith, or a well-worn leather satchel that has crossed continents. Their home is a museum of curiosities-handmade ceramics, rare books, a piece of driftwood that caught their eye on some forgotten beach.

They are drawn to fragrances that tell stories, and Phu Quoc D’annam-with its blend of ocean brine, warm spices, and smoky woods-speaks to their love of the untamed. It is not a scent for the timid; it is for those who understand that beauty is often found in the wild, the imperfect, the unrefined.

In love, they are passionate but elusive. They crave deep connection yet fear the weight of permanence. Their relationships are intense but often transient, as they struggle to reconcile their need for intimacy with their terror of being anchored. They are most at home with those who share their hunger for the unknown-fellow wanderers, artists, thinkers who refuse to be confined.

Their lifestyle is one of deliberate fluidity. They may work in creative fields-photography, writing, design-or in roles that allow movement, like consulting or entrepreneurship. Routine is their enemy; even if they must adhere to structure, they will carve out pockets of rebellion-a spontaneous trip, an unplanned detour, a midnight swim under foreign stars.

Philosophy & Values

To them, life is an experiment, a canvas upon which they paint with broad, daring strokes. They reject dogma, preferring instead the fluidity of experience. Tradition is not an anchor but a stepping stone-something to be understood, then transcended. They value freedom above all else, not just the freedom to move, but the freedom to think, to feel, to evolve.

Yet, this pursuit of the new is not without its paradoxes. While they disdain the mundane, they sometimes romanticize the exotic to the point of fetishism. The distant becomes sacred simply because it is distant. Their philosophy is one of perpetual motion, but motion without direction can become its own kind of stagnation.

Shadow

But the Explorer has a dark twin: the Drifter. When their quest for novelty becomes compulsive, they risk becoming unmoored, floating through life without depth or commitment. Their aversion to settling can harden into a fear of true intimacy, leaving them isolated in a sea of fleeting experiences. They may mistake motion for progress, collecting memories like souvenirs but never integrating them into a cohesive self.

Their greatest challenge is to learn that discovery does not always require distance-that sometimes, the deepest journeys are inward.

Conclusion

The lover of Phu Quoc D’annam is neither tourist nor exile. They are the one who stands at the edge of the known world, inhaling the salt-laden wind, intoxicated by the promise of what lies beyond. Their life is a testament to the belief that to be truly alive is to be in motion-always seeking, always questioning.

But the wise among them learn that the greatest exploration is not of place, but of soul. And perhaps, in time, they will find that the rarest treasures are not those gathered from distant lands, but those forged in the stillness of a heart that has learned to stay.