Can't Let Go Rubaza
At a glance
Is Can't Let Go Rubaza worth trying?
Can't Let Go by Rubaza is a fragrance for women and men.
- Best match
- Casual, Office wear in Spring, Summer
- Performance feel
- Moderate longevity with Moderate sillage
- Signature profile
- woody, fruity, green with Tangerine, Green Notes, Apricot
The first impression
Can't Let Go by Rubaza is a fragrance for women and men. Can't Let Go was launched in 2020. The nose behind this fragrance is Andreas Wilhelm. Top notes are Tangerine, Green Notes and Apricot; middle notes are Peach, Guaiac Wood, Patchouli and Blackberry; base notes are Vetiver, Cedar and Ambergris.
What shapes the scent
The perfumer behind it
Andreas Wilhelm
Andreas Wilhelm is a perfumer known for his work with independent and niche fragrance houses. His style often balances bold, contrasting elements with refined clarity, as seen in the structured compositions of the Favorit & Co series and the intense presence of Gisada Ambassador Men. He creates scents that feel both modern and grounded, favoring clean lines and unexpected material pairings.
Notes pyramid
The mood it creates
The Wanderer Archetype: Portrait of Can't Let Go Rubaza
Essence
The Wanderer lives for the journey, embodied by Can't Let Go Rubaza's restless transitions from tangerine zest to vetiver-dark trails. They are the friend who sends postcards from border towns, their scent a palimpsest of apricot dust and guaiac wood souvenirs. The green notes sing of train windows left open to unknown landscapes.
Style & Aesthetic
Their wardrobe is a patchwork of flea market finds-a Moroccan vest here, Japanese work pants there. The fragrance's fruity-earthy seesaw mirrors their ability to make a campsite feel like home with just a cedar-amber candle.
Philosophy & Values
They trust detours more than destinations. The peach's sun-warmed optimism keeps them moving, while patchouli whispers of ancient roots they'll someday return to. For them, the blackberry note is a reminder to savor wildness wherever it grows.
Relationships
They collect souls like passport stamps-intense but transient connections. Lovers remember them by the vetiver lingering on abandoned pillowcases. Friends receive sudden calls from payphones in rainy ports.
Lifestyle
A single backpack holds everything: a dog-eared Rilke, a tin of apricot lozenges. The moderate sillage reflects their belief in traveling light, though the ambergris base betrays a longing for anchors.
Shadow
Their freedom can become rootlessness-the tangerine top note always fleeing before it ripens. The cedar warns of shelters built then abandoned too soon.
Conclusion
Can't Let Go Rubaza is the olfactory diary of the Wanderer: citrus-bright beginnings, woody midnights under strange skies, and ambergris-like salt on the skin-the only constant.