The Story
Why it exists.
Acqua di Giò Profondo Parfum takes the original Acqua di Giò concept further into territory it always hinted at but never fully claimed. The original, that clean aquatic benchmark defined masculine freshness for a generation. Profondo Parfum takes that foundation and presses it darker, denser, closer to the skin. What's remarkable is how little effort it takes to notice the difference. Marine and green mandarin open clean, then patchouli and labdanum do what patchouli and labdanum always do, ground everything, make it mean something. The marine doesn't simply evaporate; it settles beneath the surface, creating depth that rewards patience. The overall impression is one of restraint and power working together, an aquatic that finally feels complete rather than merely refreshing.
If this were a song
Community picks
Solitude
Bill Evans Trio
The Beginning
Acqua di Giò Profondo Parfum takes the original Acqua di Giò concept further into territory it always hinted at but never fully claimed. The original, that clean aquatic benchmark defined masculine freshness for a generation. Profondo Parfum takes that foundation and presses it darker, denser, closer to the skin. What's remarkable is how little effort it takes to notice the difference. Marine and green mandarin open clean, then patchouli and labdanum do what patchouli and labdanum always do, ground everything, make it mean something. The marine doesn't simply evaporate; it settles beneath the surface, creating depth that rewards patience. The overall impression is one of restraint and power working together, an aquatic that finally feels complete rather than merely refreshing.
What makes the composition interesting is the contrast between the aquatic top and the resinous base. Marine notes are typically volatile, they arrive fast and leave fast, leaving you with whatever middle notes you've got. Here, patchouli and labdanum arrive early enough that they reshape the arc entirely. The marine doesn't disappear so much as settle underneath it, like tide lines on wet sand. Acacia adds a yellow floral warmth that prevents the whole thing from going too dry. It's a careful balance: enough marine to justify the name, enough resinous wood to give it permanence, enough floral to keep it from being a leather scent pretending to be aquatic.
The Evolution
The opening is immediate: green mandarin and marine salt arriving together, sharp and clean for the first ten to fifteen minutes. The citrus doesn't fully recede, it softens into a background brightness as the heart materializes. Acacia arrives around the twenty-minute mark, warm and powdery, the marine fading beneath it like morning fog lifting. By the hour, patchouli takes over the narrative, dark and earthy, with labdanum adding a sticky resinous sweetness that extends the drydown for hours on most skin types. The final stage is close to the skin, not projection, but presence. You know it's there. Others need to be close enough to feel it.
Cultural Impact
Acqua di Giò Profondo Parfum exists as a continuation of the original fragrance's vision, exploring the deeper possibilities within that aquatic framework. It offers something for those who appreciate the original's clean character but seek additional complexity and resonance. This Parfum version takes the familiar marine structure and infuses it with richer, more intimate qualities. The result feels familiar yet distinctly different, a refined expression that maintains connection to its source while standing on its own.
The House
Italy · Est. 1975
Giorgio Armani fragrances translate the house's signature Italian elegance into the world of scent. Known for its sophisticated and timeless character, the brand creates perfumes that feel both modern and classic, enhancing the wearer's personality rather than overpowering it. It's the olfactory equivalent of a perfectly tailored, unlined jacket: effortless, confident, and impeccably constructed.
If this were a song
Community picks
A late afternoon Mediterranean coast. Not the crowded beach, the rocks beyond it, where the breeze carries salt and warmth simultaneously. The kind of hour where the light turns golden and everything slows down. Music for this moment should feel unhurried, a little warm, not quite melancholy but not trying to be happy either.
Solitude
Bill Evans Trio






















