
Divine Gardens (Mantua)
DSH PerfumesEau de Parfum2011
Side by side


Celestial Patchouli rates higher with the community and wears longer on skin, while Divine Gardens (Mantua) projects louder.
This match is a verified relationship from our fragrance graph. The score weighs each fragrance's notes, accords, mood, occasion, weather fit, gender, and performance — the same scale as the badges on every “reminds of” rail.
The essentials
| Divine Gardens (Mantua) | Celestial Patchouli | |
|---|---|---|
| Concentration | Eau de Parfum | Eau de Parfum |
| Launched | 2011 | 2017 |
| Gender | Unisex | Female |
| Perfumer | Dawn Spencer Hurwitz | Carlos Benaïm |
| Best season | Spring | Fall |
Scent DNA
Divine Gardens (Mantua)
Celestial Patchouli
Shared between both fragrances
The pyramid
Notes both fragrances share
Community taste
| Divine Gardens (Mantua) | Celestial Patchouli | |
|---|---|---|
| Score | 3.5/5 | 4/5 |
| Longevity | 2-4 hours | 6-10 hours |
| Sillage | strong | moderate |
No varnish
Green chypre with a tomato leaf note isn't a safe blind buy. But if you've ever wanted to smell like you just walked through a Renaissance garden at dawn, not a fantasy garden.Divine Gardens (Mantua)
Rose and patchouli isn't original, but the iris and osmanthus running underneath make it something else. Powdery without being precious. The patchouli keeps you grounded while the rose floats above.Celestial Patchouli
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