The Essence Vault Edp

F £

Do Son

The Essence Vault Do Son is an Eau de Parfum. The fragrance opens with Orange Blossom and Pink Pepper, settles into a heart of Tuberose and Iris, and dries down to a base of Benzoin and Musk.

Diptyque's Do Son is the most-loved-or-hated tuberose in modern niche - some find it a serene seaside floral, others a green-pepper-and-creamy-petal headache. EV's No. 293 holds the tuberose-orange-blossom centre but softens the polarising sharpness that gives the original its character.
  • Feminine
  • Elegant
  • Fresh
  • Spring
  • Romantic
Do Son Eau de Parfum bottle

ScentArt

Profile

Citrus Floral Fruity Green Sweet Warm Woody Earthy Animalic Fresh
Citrus 20%
Floral 95%
Fruity 10%
Green 30%
Sweet 35%
Warm 45%
Woody 25%
Earthy 15%
Animalic 30%
Fresh 60%

Mood Profile

Mood Energising
Calming
Character Playful
Serious
Sentiment Uplifting
Brooding

Performance

Longevity
Moderate (4-6h)
Projection
Intimate
Intensity
Moderate

Best Seasons

Best For:
Spring Summer
Also Works:
Fall

Tuberose-white-floral compositions bloom in warm weather - spring and summer the strongest seasons; the dupe's softer profile pushes it slightly cooler-tolerant than the original.

Best Occasions

Best For:
Date Casual Formal
Also Works:
Office

Date and warm-weather casual are the natural homes; office at low dosage works because this reads softer than the polarising original.

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Where to buy

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About

Diptyque's Do Son arrived in 2005 as Fabrice Pellegrin's tribute to a Vietnamese coastal village, building a tuberose-led white floral over a soft musk-benzoin base and pairing it with a green-pepper opening that splits opinion. The original's appeal is its tension: serene on one side, almost aquatic-floral; pungent on the other, with the tuberose reading creamy-indolic to detractors. The Essence Vault's No. 293 is a softer reading of that same architecture. The opening leads on Moroccan orange flower and iris with pink pepper providing the spice lift, the heart anchors firmly on tuberose with the original's quiet rose backing, and the base lands on benzoin and clean musk for a smoother close than the genuine article's near-aquatic transparency. The first thirty minutes track Do Son's dewy floral character well; the heart is where this composition lands its strongest impression. What the budget version cannot capture is dimensionality. Do Son's signature is the way its tuberose sits over a barely-there marine accord, and that humid-air translucency does not survive the budget translation - here the white floral reads warmer and slightly powdier, more conventionally pretty, less coastal. Performance is around five to seven hours of close-radius wear, in line with what wearers report on the EDP itself. For wearers who find the genuine Do Son too pungent or too expensive at niche pricing, this is a more wearable, less divisive version. If the genuine Do Son's coastal-tuberose tension is the part that drew you, the original is the bottle to chase; if you just want a wearable creamy-tuberose perfume for spring, this works.