Ocean Dream Giorgio Beverly Hills

For Women
Eau de Toilette
Year: 1996
Moderate
Sillage
Moderate
Longevity
Summer
Best Season
Casual
Best For

Fragrance Story

Ocean Dream by Giorgio Beverly Hills is a Floral fragrance for women. Ocean Dream was launched in 1996. The nose behind this fragrance is Alberto Morillas.

Composition Profile

powdery 100%
floral 85%
aquatic 70%
vanilla 60%
marine 50%
woody 40%
aromatic 35%
musky 30%
white floral 25%
fresh 20%

About the Perfumer

Alberto Morillas

Alberto Morillas

Alberto Morillas is a master perfumer based in Geneva, Switzerland, and a longtime collaborator with Firmenich. His style is known for refined, luminous compositions that balance natural elegance with modern clarity. He created the bold leather and spice of Amouage Opus VII - Reckless Leather, the fresh citrus depth of Acqua di Parma Colonia Intensa, and the woody warmth of Aedes de Venustas Palissandre D'or. His work has shaped contemporary perfumery across both niche and luxury houses.

Fragrance Notes

All Notes

Complete scent profile

Water Lily Water Lily
Sea Notes Sea Notes
Water Heliotrope Water Heliotrope
Musk Musk
Orange Blossom Orange Blossom
Sandalwood Sandalwood
Vanilla Vanilla
Vetiver Vetiver
Cedar Cedar
Unique Character

Ocean Dream Giorgio Beverly Hills by Giorgio Beverly Hills offers a distinctive olfactory experience that stands out from other fragrances in its category.

Artisanal Creation

Crafted with the finest ingredients and a blend of traditional and modern perfumery techniques, this fragrance represents the pinnacle of the perfumer's art.

Signature Style

Ocean Dream Giorgio Beverly Hills embodies the distinctive style of Giorgio Beverly Hills while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.

Character Profile

The Explorer Archetype: Portrait of Ocean Dream Giorgio Beverly Hills

Essence

Ocean Dream by Giorgio Beverly Hills is a scent of salt and sky, of horizons yet unseen. It carries the crispness of sea spray, the warmth of sun-bleached driftwood, and a faint whisper of citrus-like the first light of dawn over open water. This is not the scent of deep, mysterious abysses, but of the endless surface, always shifting, always calling. The person who wears it does not seek to drown in the depths but to ride the waves, to chase the next breeze.

At their core, this individual is an Explorer, one of Jung’s fundamental archetypes. The Explorer is driven by curiosity, restlessness, and the need for freedom. They are not content with stagnation; they must move, must discover, must feel the wind at their back. The ocean is their metaphor-vast, untamed, indifferent to human concerns, yet irresistibly alluring.

They are not the Hero, who seeks conquest, nor the Sage, who seeks knowledge for its own sake. The Explorer seeks experience-raw, unfiltered, fleeting. They are drawn to the unknown not to master it, but to be changed by it.

Shadow

Yet the Explorer’s strength is also their flaw. Their relentless pursuit of the new can make them incapable of stillness. They mistake movement for growth, confusing the accumulation of experiences with true depth. When boredom strikes-and it always does-they abandon commitments, leaving behind unfinished projects, half-read books, lovers who still ache for them.

Their independence can curdle into emotional detachment. They pride themselves on self-sufficiency, but this is often a defense against vulnerability. They fear being tied down because they fear being known too deeply-what if, beneath the wanderer’s charm, there is nothing solid?

At their worst, they become restless ghosts, always chasing the next horizon but never arriving. The ocean does not care for those who sail upon it; it merely exists. The Explorer risks becoming the same-a force of motion without purpose, a wave that never breaks upon the shore.

Conclusion

Their life is one of motion. They may not be a literal traveler-though many are-but their mind is always wandering, always questioning. They have a natural aversion to routine, finding comfort in spontaneity. Their style reflects this: effortless, slightly weathered, as if they’ve just returned from an adventure. Linen shirts, sun-faded jeans, sandals worn from walking-nothing too polished, nothing that would weigh them down.

Philosophically, they value freedom above all else. They distrust dogma, preferring to test ideas against the world rather than accept them on faith. Their relationships are fluid; they love deeply but fleetingly, fearing the anchor of permanence. They are the friend who disappears for months, then returns with stories, eyes alight with new discoveries.

Their tastes are eclectic but always rooted in sensation. They prefer music that evokes landscapes-folk ballads, ambient waves, the hum of a distant highway. They savor food that reminds them of places: ripe mangoes eaten on a beach, bitter espresso in a foreign café, the smoky tang of a seaside bonfire.