Let's Dive Ds&durga

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2024
Moderate
Sillage
Good
Longevity
Summer
Best Season
Casual
Best For

Fragrance Story

Let's Dive by DS&Durga is a Aromatic Aquatic fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Let's Dive was launched in 2024. The nose behind this fragrance is David Seth Moltz. Top notes are Sea water and Seaweed; middle notes are Ozonic notes and Rock rose; base notes are Choya Nakh and Ambergris.

Composition Profile

ozonic 100%
marine 85%
aromatic 70%
aquatic 60%
amber 50%
animalic 40%
salty 35%

About the Perfumer

David Seth Moltz

David Seth Moltz

David Seth Moltz is the co-founder and perfumer of D.S. & Durga, a brand known for its conceptual and evocative scents. His catalog includes King Majesty Bergamot Chypre, Wipeout!, and historical-inspired pieces like 1538 Rheims and Amber Kiso. Moltz’s work often blends natural and synthetic materials to create immersive olfactory narratives.

Fragrance Notes

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Sea water Sea water
Seaweed Seaweed

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Ozonic notes Ozonic notes
Rock rose Rock rose

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Choya Nakh Choya Nakh
Ambergris Ambergris

Character Profile

The Explorer Archetype: Portrait of Let's Dive Ds&durga

Essence

The person who gravitates toward Let’s Dive by DS&Durga is not one who lingers at the surface. They are drawn to the scent’s aquatic depth, its blend of saltwater, ozone, and marine botanicals-an olfactory embodiment of the abyss. This fragrance is not merely a preference but a declaration: they are the Explorer, the one who seeks the uncharted, whether in the world or within themselves.

Philosophy & Values

Their philosophy is one of perpetual motion. They believe truth is not found but forged through experience, and they distrust dogma in any form. They are drawn to existentialism, Zen Buddhism, or deep ecology-systems that emphasize direct engagement with existence rather than passive belief.

Relationships are both their joy and their challenge. They crave deep, soulful connections but often struggle with commitment-not out of fear, but because they resist anything that might chain them to a single version of themselves. They love intensely but fleetingly, leaving behind a trail of admirers who remember them as a force of nature rather than a fixed presence. Their closest bonds are with those who understand their need for space, who do not mistake their wandering for indifference.

Shadow

Yet, for all their brilliance, the Explorer has a shadow-one that haunts them even as they outrun it. Their relentless pursuit of the new can become an evasion, a way to avoid confronting deeper wounds. They may mistake movement for growth, accumulating experiences without ever integrating them. At their worst, they become the Wanderer, untethered and unfulfilled, always searching but never arriving.

Their independence, so often a strength, can curdle into isolation. They may pride themselves on self-sufficiency to the point of emotional detachment, leaving others feeling like waystations rather than destinations. And though they despise routine, they sometimes fail to see that depth requires repetition-that some truths only reveal themselves to those who stay long enough to listen.

Conclusion

Their life is a series of departures-some physical, others intellectual or emotional. They thrive on novelty, on the thrill of discovery, whether it’s a remote coastline, an obscure philosophy, or an unexpected connection with another person. Routine is their antithesis; stagnation, their greatest fear. They are the friend who sends postcards from distant lands, the colleague who suggests the radical idea in the meeting, the lover who speaks in riddles and metaphors rather than plain declarations.

Their tastes are eclectic but deliberate. They favor minimalist design with an edge-Japanese ceramics, Scandinavian furniture, or brutalist architecture-spaces that feel both open and enigmatic. Their wardrobe is functional yet striking: tailored linen, well-worn leather, or a single piece of jewelry with a story. They consume art that demands interpretation-films by Tarkovsky, music by Björk, novels by Borges. They do not seek comfort in the familiar; they seek provocation.