Men
Do Son Eau de Toilette
Acordes principales
Descripción
Do Son Eau de Toilette by Diptyque, created in 2005 by perfumer Fabrice Pellegrin, is a floral jewel for women that evokes the essence of the Vietnamese island of Do Son. Its olfactory pyramid unfolds with a luminous top note of African orange blossom, iris, and rose, giving way to a spicy and floral heart of neroli and pink pepper. The composition rests on a warm, woody base of musk and benzoin, offering timeless elegance.
Resumen rápido
Cuándo llevarla (votos)
Notas clave
Comunidad
4,610 votos
- Positivo 75%
- Negativo 14%
- Neutral 11%
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 Do Son Eau de Toilette y elige según envío, precio o disponibilidad.
Amazon
Envío rápidoEntrega rápida y política de devoluciones conocida.
Ideal si priorizas velocidad y disponibilidad.
Ver en AmazoneBay
Más opcionesMás opciones de precio, formatos y vendedores.
Útil para comparar alternativas antes de decidir.
Ver en eBayCaracterísticas
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.
Para dejar una reseña necesitas iniciar sesión.
22 reseñas
Mostrando las más recientes primero.
Category:




The neroli notes are powerful, but compared to Fracas or Tubéreuse Criminelle, they are less intense and animalic. Do Son is fresher, cleaner, and easier to wear, ideal for daytime. It’s a festival of white flowers with a citrus opening and green touch that lasts until drydown. I don’t detect rose or iris, although I suppose the iris gives those earthy final nuances that, with the musk, create a natural yet sensual aroma. In Vietnam, neroli is used in religious rituals; although I don’t know the exact connection, trying it made me see the link to the sublime (I even think I can detect incense!). Three sprays and I feel like I’m in heaven.
Its neroli notes are potent, but compared to Fracas or Tubéreuse Criminelle, they’re less intense and animalic. Do Son is fresher, cleaner, and easier to wear—perfect for daytime. It’s a white floral festival with a citrus opening and green touch that lasts until drydown. I don’t detect rose or iris, though I assume the iris provides those earthy final nuances that, combined with the musk, create a natural yet sensual scent. In Vietnam, neroli is used in religious rituals; while I’m not sure of the exact connection, wearing it made me feel linked to the sublime (I even thought I smelled incense!). Three sprays and I feel like I’m in heaven.
I was looking for a neroli for my beginner nose and didn’t want something like Carolina Herrera or Fracas. A client gifted me this and it was a hit. The potent neroli lightens up over time, gaining orange blossom freshness. It’s not sweet or cloying, but green and relaxing. Smells like Oriental serenity and mysticism. The musk adds cleanliness, while benzoin and iris give a warm touch. It’s soft, light, and feminine. Perfect for spring and summer, versatile for the office or dinner. Not as intense or creamy as other tuberoses. Elegant, classic, yet youthful. The bottle is heavy and minimalist, with pagoda lithography in Vietnam that evokes the sea breeze and her mother’s memory. Although it’s beautiful, I’ll keep looking for something sweeter and creamier.
I was looking for a neroli for my novice nose, and although I knew tuberose has loyal fans, I was hesitant to appreciate them at first. Options like Carolina Herrera or Fracas scared me because they’re too potent, so a thoughtful client gifted me this fragrance. It has a strong neroli opening that softens with fresh orange blossom notes. It’s not sweet or cloying, but green and relaxing, transporting you to exotic places and Eastern serenity. The musk adds cleanliness, while benzoin and iris provide warmth. It’s soft, light, and feminine—perfect for spring and summer. It has good longevity and moderate sillage; it makes you noticed without being overwhelming, ideal as your personal floral. It’s not as intense or creamy as others, making it very versatile. Perfect if you’re afraid of big tuberoses but want to try neroli. Elegant, classic yet youthful, suitable for the office or dinner dates. Don’t wear it at the gym or beach. Less is more. The bottle is heavy and elegant, with a design reminiscent of a Vietnamese pagoda, evoking a seaside breeze at sunset with tuberose, just as her mother remembered. Although it’s beautiful, I’ll keep searching for something sweeter and creamier.
A creamy neroli explosion, ‘buttery,’ nothing animalic. Smells clean and fresh with a hint of coconut. Ideal for heat or beach days. Longevity and sillage are excellent.
Explosion of creamy neroli, ‘buttery’ type, nothing animalic. Smells clean and fresh with a hint of coconut. Ideal for heat or going to the beach. Longevity and sillage are excellent.
Fresh, feminine, and heavy on the neroli. The opening is powerful, but after 15 minutes it transforms completely into something floral and musky. Great sillage and longevity. Highly recommended, I give it a 9.
Perfect balance between orange blossom, roses, and a robust, fresh neroli. It creates that natural freshness that seems to come straight from your own skin. For me, simply sublime.
A pleasant homage to neroli. There is no fragrance on the market with a neroli scent as natural. Maybe the new Hermes perfume, Twilly, comes close. Neroli is a difficult flower. It creates extremes. You either love it or hate it, and the process of creating the natural essence is laborious. Perfumers say that creating a perfume with neroli requires great talent. It’s a difficult flower to combine. This fragrance is floral, with a certain sweet touch from the benzoin, giving it an air of mystery and seduction, and has a modern touch from the pink pepper. It’s not outdated. Its sillage is good and the fixative is excellent. I see it for a strong and seductive woman. A femme fatale of the 21st century. I love it!!
A delightful homage to neroli. No fragrance has a neroli scent as natural; perhaps the new Twilly by Hermès comes close. Neroli is a difficult flower that creates extremes. Creating its natural essence is complex and requires great talent. This fragrance is floral, with a certain sweet touch from the benzoin that adds mystery and seduction, and a modern note from pink pepper. It’s not outdated. It has great sillage and excellent longevity. I see it for a strong, seductive woman, a femme fatale of the 21st century. I love it.
Neroli… delicious neroli!!! More than the tuberose and gardenia from this Lauder, I felt it was more similar to Gucci Bloom, though it seems synthetic to me. This Do Son is much better, long-lasting, and always maintains that sparkling line that caught me when I applied it… it’s rich!!! Recommended 100%… longevity, excellent! Sillage, very rich!
Neroli filtered through citrus light. Nothing of the criminal tuberose from old formulas, those that make you think of sex and cigarette smoke. The EDT of Do Son is a neroli stripped of grease, becoming a citrus tuberose, almost green, with hints of coconut and tiare. Watch out, it doesn’t smell like coconut or frangipani, but it does have that beachy and sophisticated consistency of body oil. I don’t see that waxy consistency you mention, though I do notice it and it stings my nose quite a bit in Gucci Bloom, a perfume I didn’t like and still don’t like, but I like it because it doesn’t fall into candy-like formulas nor soft pear and jasmine musks. Regarding tuberoses, I still stick with Fragile by Gaultier, the divine Gió, and even Amarige. And with Twilly, which seems almost a unisex neroli due to its sporty aftertaste thanks to the ginger. The original Carolina Herrera one still seems like a disaster to me; I faint at the smell, and you need some guts to defend it without getting poisoned. Do Son doesn’t drive me crazy; I notice a slightly plastic aftertaste, with memories of stick air fresheners, expensive, yes, though it must be my nose because it usually happens with notes like orchid, peony, freesia, magnolia, or certain white flowers, which is rare for them to smell like natural breeze. Still, it didn’t seem like a bad fragrance to me. Diptyque may please some more than others, but everything I’ve sampled from the brand is well-made and delivers on its promise. P.S. Excellent longevity.
If you like abstract fragrances with undefined blends, this isn’t one. To me, it’s a bouquet of freshly cut flowers: aromatic neroli and roses, with a fresh, freshly pruned green note. It’s realistic, smelling exactly like that, even at drydown. Very natural, nothing synthetic. It smells like the glamour of a woman having breakfast in a linen suit and sunhat, or the one heading to a sunny morning golf game. It’s the luxury and elegance of nature’s scent, not for black-tie galas.
If you like abstract fragrances with undefined formulations, this isn’t one. For me, it’s a spectacular bouquet of freshly cut flowers. Neroli and very aromatic roses, and green. A very fresh green, freshly pruned. It’s a realistic scent, it smells exactly like that, even in the dry-down. Very natural, nothing synthetic. It smells like the glamour of a woman having breakfast in a linen suit and sun hat, or the woman who looks impeccable heading out to play golf in the fresh morning, because she lives between luxury and comfort. It’s not a night perfume nor the sweet luxury for a gala; it’s the luxury and elegance of the scent of nature.
Today I’m telling you about DO SON EDT by Diptyque: It was love at first sniff. It’s a sweet and creamy neroli with green touches, nothing complicated, totally suitable for daily use since it’s not overwhelming. I recommend it for spring and summer, which is when it shines the most. Although it’s an EDT, it has excellent longevity and sillage, so you don’t need to apply much. I’ve tried the EDP version and that doesn’t convince me because on my skin it becomes too woody and highlights the spiciness of the pink pepper too much.
(Chapter 4 of tuberose lovers) THE TUBEROSE THAT MADE ME FALL IN LOVE WITH TUBEROSE. Long before Gucci Bloom, Do Son by Diptyque was my first great tuberosa love. A soliflore that years ago introduced me to the hypnotic character of this white flower. I adore Diptyque for its conceptual compositions that evoke olfactory landscapes. In Do Son, Fabrice Pellegrin takes us to a field of neroli in summer, under a sun that warms the petals. Unlike mythical fragrances like Fracas, Pellegrin strips the tuberose of its usual companions: carnation and hyacinth. Here, the neroli blooms in solitude, without losing its floral and narcotic character, but it’s lighter, less indolic, and more airy. For me, it remains an unavoidable reference: natural, elegant, and captivating. It’s always a pleasure to rediscover it, like returning to a landscape that never loses its beauty.
(Tuberose lovers chapter 4) THE TUBEROSE THAT MADE ME LOVE TUBEROSE. Long before Gucci Bloom burst onto the scene, Do Son by Diptyque was my first great tuberoso love. A soliflore that years ago introduced me to the hypnotic character of this white flower. I adore Diptyque for its conceptual compositions that evoke landscapes. In Do Son, Fabrice Pellegrin takes us to a field of neroli in summer, under a sun that heats the petals. Instead of following mythical fragrances like Fracas, Pellegrin strips the tuberose of its usual companions: carnation and hyacinth. Here, the neroli blooms in solitude, without losing its floral and narcotic character, but with a lighter facet, less indolic and more luminous. For me, it remains an unavoidable reference: natural, elegant, and captivating. It’s always a pleasure to rediscover it.
I didn’t get this fragrance; I was so excited to try something from Diptyque, but I think it wasn’t a good idea to start with it. It’s a dense, opulent scent—an explosive, too-pungent narcissus/jasmine that overwhelms me completely; I can’t smell anything else. It’s like stepping into an Andalusian courtyard heavy with jasmine, which is very realistic, and the quality of the notes is obvious. Even though I like florals, this feels too ‘stately’ for me, and I can’t see any occasion to wear it. I only enjoy it during the dry-down at 2-3 hours when the floral power fades and it sweetens with the musky resin. I can’t even imagine the EdP 😅
If you want to try something from Diptyque, I recommend following up with Eau des Sens. Maybe it’s not what you’re looking for, but it’s a clean and natural perfume. At first, I felt it was a challenge, but over time you notice it moves away from many commercial scents. I think it’s a good option if you have the chance to try it. By the way, it has such a strong presence that it only exists in EDT. Check out the reviews and let us know your thoughts after.
I couldn’t make it with this fragrance; I was really eager to try something from Diptyque and I think starting with this wasn’t a good idea. It’s a dense, opulent perfume, an explosive neroli/jasmine that’s too sharp for me; I don’t smell anything else. It’s like stepping into an Andalusian patio loaded with jasmine, very realistic—the quality of the notes is evident—but despite liking florals, it feels too ‘aristocratic’ and I can’t see an occasion to wear it. I only enjoy it during the dry-down at 2-3 hours when the floral power drops and it sweetens with the ambergris resin. I can’t even imagine the EDP 😅
Neroli, vanilla, and orange blossom. I love it because the neroli note fascinates me and here it’s the star. It’s a floral fragrance where fresh, realistic, and very feminine neroli takes the lead. It’s addictive. Other fragrances with neroli include Gucci Bloom, Patio de Botanicae, L’Interdit by Givenchy, and Elie Saab Le Parfum.
Since I first wore it, it transported me to my grandmother’s patio with that huge blooming jasmine. It smells super natural, though you can also detect a bit of orange blossom, which sometimes confuses me with jasmine. After an hour, the neroli starts to stand out more. It’s perfect for relaxing without being too heavy. Nothing new, but very well made.