Ultra Sea Marcoccia

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2023

At a glance

Is Ultra Sea Marcoccia worth trying?

Ultra Sea by Marcoccia is a Aromatic Aquatic fragrance for women and men.

Best match
Casual wear in Spring, Summer
Performance feel
Moderate longevity with Moderate sillage
Signature profile
woody, marine, aromatic with Sea Notes, Sea water, Amber

The first impression

Ultra Sea by Marcoccia is a Aromatic Aquatic fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Ultra Sea was launched in 2023. The nose behind this fragrance is Andrea Marcoccia. Top notes are Sea Notes, Sea water, Amber, Rose, White Cedar Extract and Cyclamen; middle notes are Sea water, Lily, Apple, Davana, Grapes, Amber, Sandalwood and White Rose; base notes are Iris, Amber, Sandalwood, Ebony and Musk.

What shapes the scent

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

The perfumer behind it

Andrea Marcoccia

Andrea Marcoccia

Andrea Marcoccia is a perfumer known for creating fragrances for Aqua di Ponza and Bottega del Profumo. His work includes Aqua Di Ponza and several scents for Bottega del Profumo such as Piazza Delle Cinque Lune, Piazza Esedra, Via Degli Avignonesi, Via Dei Condotti, Via Del Corso, Via Di Campo Marzio, and Via Margutta. These compositions often evoke Italian landscapes and urban atmospheres.

Notes pyramid

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Sea Notes Sea Notes
Sea water Sea water
Amber Amber
Rose Rose
White Cedar Extract White Cedar Extract
Cyclamen Cyclamen

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Sea water Sea water
Lily Lily
Apple Apple
Davana Davana
Grapes Grapes
Amber Amber
Sandalwood Sandalwood
White Rose White Rose

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Iris Iris
Amber Amber
Sandalwood Sandalwood
Ebony Ebony
Musk Musk

The mood it creates

The Explorer Archetype: Portrait of Ultra Sea Marcoccia

Essence

Ultra Sea embodies the Explorer archetype, drawn to horizons both literal and emotional. The fragrance's marine notes evoke restless tides, while apple and grapes suggest provisions tucked into a sailcloth pack. Sandalwood and musk in the base speak of well-worn maps and nights spent tracing constellations.

They're the type who books one-way tickets but always sends postcards. The rose and cyclamen in the top notes reveal their romantic streak-this isn't exploration for conquest but for connection.

Style & Aesthetic

Their wardrobe is a passport of fabrics: Indonesian batik scarves, Breton stripes salt-bleached from years of wear. They own one good leather satchel and twenty-five tote bags from obscure museums. Their living space is nomadic even when stationary-a folding screen painted with migratory birds, a bed piled with kilim pillows.

Walls display pressed seaweed alongside polaroids of strangers who became temporary family. Every drawer holds seashells, foreign coins, and expired ferry tickets.

Philosophy & Values

They believe borders are illusions and that the best education comes from missing the last bus home. The sea water in their fragrance reflects their fluid sense of belonging-equally at ease in port alleys and open ocean. Davana's green freshness mirrors their conviction that growth requires displacement.

Their politics are inherently internationalist. To them, climate change isn't abstract but personal-they've watched fishing villages disappear.

Relationships

They collect people like sand dollars-treasured but often left behind. Lovers know them as thrilling but transient, their affection as bracing as the white cedar in their fragrance. Friends receive sporadic letters full of sketches and pressed flowers, arriving months after the adventures described.

They struggle with depth versus breadth, sometimes skimming surfaces like a petrel over waves. The iris in their base notes hints at longing they rarely voice.

Lifestyle

Dawn finds them jogging unfamiliar docks or deciphering metro maps in languages they don't speak. They work seasonally-harvesting olives, crewing charter boats-always saving for the next departure. Lunch might be street food eaten on a seawall, journal balanced on knees.

Afternoons are for getting lost intentionally. Evenings could mean hostel kitchens or, when home, cooking dishes that never taste quite right without foreign air.

Shadow

Their addiction to motion can mask fear of staying. The amber in their fragrance sticks to memories they pretend not to hoard. They may romanticize rootlessness, ignoring how the musk of loneliness clings after too many goodbyes.

When unbalanced, they become caricatures of themselves-collecting experiences like souvenirs without integration.

Conclusion

Ultra Sea is for those who hear the tide in their blood. It suits neither the timid nor the mere tourist, but rather those who understand that every voyage inward requires passports to outer worlds. Like the fragrance itself, they remind us that exploration isn't about distance-it's about the salt-washed clarity of seeing familiar shores with forever-new eyes.