Men
Aquaman
Acordes principales
Descripción
Aquaman by Rochas is a woody-spicy fragrance for men. Launched in 2001, this composition was created by perfumer Jacques Cavallier Belletrud. The olfactory pyramid opens with top notes of cypress, eucalyptus and grapefruit; the heart reveals coriander, sage and geranium; while the base settles on cedar, cardamom and amber.
Resumen rápido
Cuándo llevarla (votos)
Notas clave
Comunidad
295 votos
- Positivo 89%
- Negativo 8.8%
- Neutral 2.0%
Pirámide olfativa
Estructura completa de la fragancia: de la salida al fondo.
Comunidad
Qué dicen los usuarios sobre propiedad, preferencia y mejor momento de uso.
Propiedad
¿La tienen, la tuvieron o la quieren?
Preferencia
Cómo valora la comunidad esta fragancia.
Uso recomendado
Estación y momento del día con más votos.
Dónde comprar
Compara tiendas verificadas para Aquaman y elige según envío, precio o disponibilidad.
Amazon
Envío rápidoEntrega rápida y política de devoluciones conocida.
Ideal si priorizas velocidad y disponibilidad.
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Útil para comparar alternativas antes de decidir.
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Resumen de votos sobre longevidad, estela, género y percepción de precio.
Longevidad
Escasa
Débil
Moderada
Duradera
Muy duradera
Estela
Suave
Moderada
Pesada
Enorme
Género
Femenino
Unisex femenino
Unisex
Unisex masculino
Masculino
Precio
Extremadamente costoso
Ligeramente costoso
Precio moderado
Buen precio
Excelente precio
Reseñas
Experiencias reales de la comunidad sobre uso diario, rendimiento y estela.
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8 reseñas
Mostrando las más recientes primero.
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I had it years ago; it seems discontinued or very hard to find. It has potential and smells wonderfully but fails greatly in performance. It suits winter better. It is a peculiar scent, like dry eucalyptus with citrus and an unknown bitter note, perhaps due to the mix of citrus and spices. There is also a sweet herbal note from the sage that reminds me of herbs for baths or rituals against bad energies, or wet herbs after a cold, rainy day, with a gentle melancholy. Upon application, it is dense and enveloping but loses its trail in minutes and stays close to the skin, almost a joke for the nose and the wallet. It promises much but delivers little: it is very ephemeral. If it had better projection and fixation, it would be a great fragrance with a strange and unique personality. Fragrance: 9/10 Longevity: 2/10 Projection: 4/10 Price: 7/10.
Totally agreed: a pleasant, fresh, marine, and herbal aroma. I see it more for daily use in summer and winter. The longevity is only two hours, which requires reapplication and makes it an expensive fragrance since you use it up in less than a month.
The opening is different, with a soft grapefruit and notes of cypress and eucalyptus. After two hours in the heat, sage and coriander gain strength. By six hours, I still notice the sage, a bit of geranium, and perhaps an ambery, musky touch. By eleven hours, cedar and amber until the very end. The trail with 1.5 ml was heavy for a couple of hours, then moderate and skin-scented, lasting over twelve hours. It smells deceptive: despite the name and marine colour, it is a soft, spiced woody fragrance for intermediate days. The ambery finish is not deep enough for the evening, and the curious opening can spark interest without being overbearing, preventing the metallic sage from dominating.
2017 was, for me, from a perfumery point of view, a year of searching for discontinued creations; they have been my focus of attention for some time, even regardless of their performance. My motivation perhaps stems from reminiscing about better (but much better) times in my life, during which these perfumes were present. Aquaman by Rochas has been my last (re)incorporation of a vintage scent; during a tour of many perfumeries in Bogotá (Colombia), I found it at a very comfortable price, with the absolute prior conviction that I would have it among my new acquisitions. It holds special memories, as my mother gifted it to me over 11 years ago on the occasion of my university graduation. A very autumnal perfume; it smells exactly as it did in my first bottle: an opening with a melancholic freshness and a dry sweetness, very vegetal, contrasted by a bitter accord, both resulting from the blend of grapefruit, eucalyptus, and cypress; the aroma fades gradually to the skin, where in that phase the woody notes appear alongside amber, a non-intrusive cardamom, and coriander. The colour of the liquid seems beautiful, as does its slender bottle. I like its aroma much more than before; it is full of sophistication and dignity. It is generally a rare scent, but with very pleasant and striking elements. It presents moderate projection and longevity far superior to what I remembered; I can clearly smell it 11 hours after application. Undoubtedly a magnificent creation by Jacques Cavallier. I wish perfumes were time machines, so we could rewind, return to better times, and amend decisions and circumstances related, always thinking of what is best for us. May we all have an excellent year in 2018.
Aquaman by Rochas was, for me, decidedly a delightful surprise—a perfume that has little to do with its name, offering oceanic and aquatic hints but actually leaning towards a luminous green without dismissing certain doses of sophistication. Jacques Cavallier really shone here. It seems he capitalised on the artistic spirit of early-millennium men’s perfumery to create a fragrance with niche aesthetics, sharing that vaporous quality with other current stars (Kenzo Air, Gucci Rush, Nemo by Cacharel, etc.), with Japanese subtlety and minimalism giving meaning to olfactory poems. The opening fits the era of its birth and sets itself apart from almost any other trend perfume to chart its own course. An intensely herbal and slightly fruity aroma emerges, where eucalyptus takes the lead. Not so much balsamic or infused, but dry, like gathering bark from the ground on a mountain walk. Add herbal notes and geranium, and you get a green energy boost, reinforced by a very subtle aquatic tone, just as was done in Horizon by Guy Laroche or Escape by Calvin Klein. The wood emerges gradually as cedar, beautifully wrapped by cypress and what I believe is vetiver (though not declared), and it lingers on the skin for many hours with excellent longevity, especially since it doesn’t boast the greatest projection (though this was common with those wonders from the 2000s). I find it very hard to understand why Aquaman isn’t included in the ace of spades, among the holy grails of the early decade, although this is in a way a blessing since, although discontinued, it is still possible to find it at a reasonable price.
I’m not sure if it’s still in production; it’s a sea-green cologne that I found amusing at the time. What I disliked most was the heart—a muddle of grapefruit and coriander that brought out notes of hot wax, a scent I hate, and sometimes juniper, which gives off that cooked egg aroma also found in Miyake’s Blue Water and the Essenza version of Acqua di Giò. Aquaman was a gentle aquatic; instead of going for a pure clone, it allowed bursts of herbal and mountainous sweetness to come through. I adored the dry-down: the grapefruit, with its laundry-basket scent, faded away to leave a calm, slow, aromatic water. It’s that ultra-cliché smell I love, which many others find banal, but here it was delicious thanks to its floral and herbal finish from sage, cardamom, and cedar. The eucalyptus was also lovely; it didn’t shout or smell of fluorine. Aquaman conveyed a sense of water—gentle, tranquil, and very comforting. It’s a perfect example of perfumes you either love or hate; if you don’t like this genre of men’s fragrances, you’ll find it repetitive, unnecessary, and artificial. I’m a lover of these waters, so for me, Aquaman was a representative very much worth considering. PS: I remember the longevity was quite acceptable.
I’m not sure if it’s still in production; it’s a sea-green cologne that I quite liked. What I disliked most about Aquaman was the heart—a muddle of grapefruit and coriander that smells of hot wax, a scent I hate, and sometimes juniper, which gives off that cooked egg aroma found in Miyake’s Blue Water and the Essenza version of Acqua di Giò. Aquaman was a gentle aquatic; instead of going for a pure, hard cologne, it allowed bursts of herbal and mountainous sweetness to come through. I adored the dry-down: the grapefruit, with its laundry-basket scent, faded away to leave a calm, slow, aromatic water. It’s that ultra-cliché smell I love, which many others find banal, but here it was delicious thanks to its floral and herbal finish from sage, cardamom, and cedar. The eucalyptus was also lovely; it didn’t shout or smell of fluorine. Aquaman conveyed a sense of water—gentle, tranquil, and very comforting. It’s a perfect example of perfumes you either love or hate; if you don’t like this genre of men’s fragrances, you’ll find it repetitive, unnecessary, and artificial. I’m a lover of these waters, so for my taste, Aquaman was a representative very much worth considering. PS: I remember the longevity was quite acceptable.
The king of blue perfumes