The Story
Why it exists.
Borabora takes its name from a place of permanent arrival, an island you land on and never want to board a plane home from. That's the feeling Silvia Martinelli built into this fragrance. Flowers in the hair, golden skin, laughter that doesn't end. The 2023 launch doesn't pretend to be anything other than what it is, a warm tropical floral that captures the languorous beauty of a place where time stops. Martinelli's Italian sensibility keeps the composition from becoming touristy or generic, instead treating the tropical notes with the same care she would give any fine fragrance material.
If this were a song
Community picks
Sultry Slow Jam
Parov Stelar
The Beginning
Borabora takes its name from a place of permanent arrival, an island you land on and never want to board a plane home from. That's the feeling Silvia Martinelli built into this fragrance. Flowers in the hair, golden skin, laughter that doesn't end. The 2023 launch doesn't pretend to be anything other than what it is, a warm tropical floral that captures the languorous beauty of a place where time stops. Martinelli's Italian sensibility keeps the composition from becoming touristy or generic, instead treating the tropical notes with the same care she would give any fine fragrance material.
The note selection reflects a philosophy of warmth without weight. Tiare flower and ylang-ylang provide the tropical character, but coconut milk tempers them into something skin-close and personal rather than room-filling and performative. Martinelli's use of white musk throughout the composition creates continuity between phases, so the progression from opening to drydown feels organic rather than abrupt. Vanilla and caramel in the base serve a dual purpose: they satisfy the gourmand expectations that the coconut milk sets up, and they provide the longevity that softer florals sometimes lack.
The Evolution
The opening blooms with tiare flower, ylang-ylang, and jasmine, a tropical trifecta that announces itself with genuine warmth rather than synthetic beach-party energy. Apricot threads through, adding a subtle tartness that gives the florals something to lean against. As the composition moves into the heart, coconut milk appears with a creamy presence that transforms the fragrance from a simple floral into something more intimate. White musk and jasmolactone keep the transition smooth, the jasmine impression lingering without duplicating the opening's intensity. The drydown arrives with vanilla and caramel, turning the fragrance into a warm edible skin-scent that feels earned rather than imposed. Amber finishes the composition, providing longevity without the heavy projection that would undermine the intimate character Martinelli established from the start.
Cultural Impact
Italian artisan perfumery carries a tradition of attentive craftsmanship, where small batches and considered compositions replace mass production. Giardini Di Toscana embodies this spirit, creating fragrances that feel personal rather than universal. Borabora is the house at its most confident: warm, sunlit, tropical without apology. It's the kind of fragrance that earns devotion not through complexity but through feeling, the scent of golden skin and flowers in the hair, built to linger in memory long after it fades from the skin. Each wearing feels like a small escape, a reminder of warmth captured in liquid form.
The House
Italy · Est. 2014
Giardini Di Toscana is an artisan perfume house that bottles the soul of Tuscany, translating memories and emotions into scent. It's a brand built on family history, yet it found global fame through the surprising viral power of its modern gourmand creations.
If this were a song
Community picks
Warm, golden, and unhurried. The mood playlist maps to that moment when the afternoon light turns everything amber, tropical florals in the air, sweet cream on skin, the kind of heat that makes everything feel like it's working out exactly right.
Sultry Slow Jam
Parov Stelar






















