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Floridita's Night

by Clément Marx
Floridita’s Night is inspired by the atmosphere of Cuban nights, and more specifically by the famous El Floridita bar in Havana, known for its cocktails and vibrant ambiance. A warm and vibrant night, a blend of cocktails and light.
Capacity 100ml
180,00€
Regular price 180,00€
Familles olfactives
Boisée
Boisée
Épicée
Ambrée
Notes de tête
  • Ceylon Cardamom
  • Elemodor
Notes de cœur
  • Double daiquiri accord
  • Myrrh
  • Tobacco leaf accord
Notes de fond
  • Tonka Bean
  • Vetiver
  • Papyrus
  • Patchouli

Occasions
  • Evening
  • Festive
  • Elegant outing
Sillage
Powerful
The Fragrance

Floridita's Night evokes a warm, lively night, amidst music, light, and clinking glasses. From the outset, there's something vibrant and radiant, with a fresh and slightly fruity facet reminiscent of a cocktail. Very quickly, a deeper warmth settles in, with sweet and alcoholic nuances that add dimension and an almost festive feeling. Over time, the fragrance becomes more enveloping, more settled, but retains that warmth and energy in the background, like a night that never truly ends. The cigar leaf accord is a creation by the perfumer inspired by tobacco leaves before combustion. It highlights their natural aromatic richness, without aiming for a smoky effect. It reveals warm, woody, honeyed, and slightly spicy notes, enriched with leathery, balsamic, and sometimes cocoa nuances, recalling the drying and fermentation stages of the leaves.

The brand

Obvious is a French perfume house founded in 2020 by David Frossard, a discreet yet essential figure in niche perfumery. A former distributor who spent over twenty years supporting the emergence of brands like Byredo, Juliette Has A Gun, Atelier Cologne, and Liquides Imaginaires, he founded Obvious after a journey that was as much philosophical as professional. Before perfume, there was philosophy, and it was in Descartes that he found the name for his brand: "évidence" (obviousness), that moment when truth presents itself without needing explanation. His initial conviction was an admission: niche perfumery had drifted. Too much convoluted storytelling, too much ostentation, too many barriers between the scent and the wearer. Obvious is his answer: remove everything that hides, everything that serves to justify a price rather than offer pleasure. The glass is made from recycled glass, the alcohol is organic, the cap is made from cork derived from wine stopper production scraps, and the packaging is cellophane-free paper. Not a communication stunt, but consistency. David Frossard didn't create a green brand; he created an honest brand. Less is more. This is obvious.

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