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Burning Barbershop

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Burning Barbershop

Smoke and spearmint walk into a barbershop. That is the premise of Burning Barbershop by D.S. & Durga, an Eau de Parfum launched in 2010 by Brooklyn-based perfumer David Seth Moltz. It sits in the fougere family, but the execution is far from conventional. Where most fougeres lean clean and barbershop-polished, this one takes the scene and sets it subtly alight. Aromatica carries the D.S. & Durga Burning Barbershop decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes.

Fragrance Notes

Top: Spearmint, Lime, Hemlock Spruce

Heart: Lavender Absolute, Tuberose, Turkish Rose

Base: Burnt Oil, Vanilla, Hay

The Scent

Spearmint and lime hit first, bright and slightly aquatic, with a cool coniferous edge from hemlock spruce that keeps things from reading like a cocktail. It is crisp without being sharp, green without being grassy. The spearmint here is not candy-sweet; it is the real thing, slightly medicinal, the kind that clings to the back of the throat. Hemlock spruce adds a resinous, almost watery pine note underneath, cooling the lime and preventing the opening from feeling citrusy in any conventional way. Within the first ten minutes, the smoke starts creeping in underneath, subtle enough that you might not clock it immediately. Then the lavender absolute steps forward, and this is where the barbershop reference locks in: dense, slightly waxy lavender, the kind that coats the inside of an old shop rather than the kind in a fresh soap bar. It has weight and gravity. It does not float. Tuberose adds a creamy, slightly indolic richness that surprises here. It is not a floral note in any conventional sense on this composition. It reads more like weight than bloom, filling out the lavender rather than sweetening it. Turkish rose stays quiet, providing depth rather than declaration. Its presence is structural, lending a soft, slightly powdery backbone that keeps the heart from going fully medicinal. By the thirty-minute mark, the smoke has committed. It is warm, oily smoke, like burnt motor oil rather than campfire, with a mechanical quality that makes the barbershop image genuinely specific and a little unsettling. This is not the kind of smoke that evokes nostalgia for wood fires. It is urban, intentional, and slightly dirty. The drydown is where this fragrance does its best work. Hay and vanilla emerge slowly, turning the smoke dusty and soft rather than harsh. The hay brings a dry, almost animalic undertone that lifts the composition out of gourmand territory and into something genuinely complex. Vanilla is present but not prominent; it rounds the edges of the smoke without pushing the base into sweetness. The overall dry-down effect is a kind of faded, slightly sepia warmth, as if the barbershop has been closed for decades but the smell never left the walls. Some wearers will register this as a split experience: the opening reads fresh and herbal, while late drydown turns dark and retro. Those expecting a conventional lavender fougere will be caught off guard by how far the base drifts from the opening. That contrast is the point, and it is what keeps Burning Barbershop interesting well past the first hour.

When to Wear

Burning Barbershop wears best in cool weather, particularly autumn and early winter, when the smoke and hay in the base feel grounded rather than heavy. It suits low-key evening outings, weekend mornings indoors, or any setting where a fragrance can breathe without competing with a crowd. It is not suited to formal events or enclosed professional spaces where the smoky character might feel intrusive.

Who Is It For

Wearers drawn to niche fougeres with an edge and a genuine concept behind them, who find standard lavender-clean masculines too safe and want something that smells like it has a story attached.

If you enjoy Incense 01 by Swiss Arabian, the smoky, resinous overlap makes them worth comparing side by side. Browse the full D.S. & Durga collection at Aromatica, which also includes Rose Atlantic.

Available as an authentic decant in Bangladesh at Aromatica in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml.

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From $999.00
Burning Barbershop
$999.00

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Description

Smoke and spearmint walk into a barbershop. That is the premise of Burning Barbershop by D.S. & Durga, an Eau de Parfum launched in 2010 by Brooklyn-based perfumer David Seth Moltz. It sits in the fougere family, but the execution is far from conventional. Where most fougeres lean clean and barbershop-polished, this one takes the scene and sets it subtly alight. Aromatica carries the D.S. & Durga Burning Barbershop decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes.

Fragrance Notes

Top: Spearmint, Lime, Hemlock Spruce

Heart: Lavender Absolute, Tuberose, Turkish Rose

Base: Burnt Oil, Vanilla, Hay

The Scent

Spearmint and lime hit first, bright and slightly aquatic, with a cool coniferous edge from hemlock spruce that keeps things from reading like a cocktail. It is crisp without being sharp, green without being grassy. The spearmint here is not candy-sweet; it is the real thing, slightly medicinal, the kind that clings to the back of the throat. Hemlock spruce adds a resinous, almost watery pine note underneath, cooling the lime and preventing the opening from feeling citrusy in any conventional way. Within the first ten minutes, the smoke starts creeping in underneath, subtle enough that you might not clock it immediately. Then the lavender absolute steps forward, and this is where the barbershop reference locks in: dense, slightly waxy lavender, the kind that coats the inside of an old shop rather than the kind in a fresh soap bar. It has weight and gravity. It does not float. Tuberose adds a creamy, slightly indolic richness that surprises here. It is not a floral note in any conventional sense on this composition. It reads more like weight than bloom, filling out the lavender rather than sweetening it. Turkish rose stays quiet, providing depth rather than declaration. Its presence is structural, lending a soft, slightly powdery backbone that keeps the heart from going fully medicinal. By the thirty-minute mark, the smoke has committed. It is warm, oily smoke, like burnt motor oil rather than campfire, with a mechanical quality that makes the barbershop image genuinely specific and a little unsettling. This is not the kind of smoke that evokes nostalgia for wood fires. It is urban, intentional, and slightly dirty. The drydown is where this fragrance does its best work. Hay and vanilla emerge slowly, turning the smoke dusty and soft rather than harsh. The hay brings a dry, almost animalic undertone that lifts the composition out of gourmand territory and into something genuinely complex. Vanilla is present but not prominent; it rounds the edges of the smoke without pushing the base into sweetness. The overall dry-down effect is a kind of faded, slightly sepia warmth, as if the barbershop has been closed for decades but the smell never left the walls. Some wearers will register this as a split experience: the opening reads fresh and herbal, while late drydown turns dark and retro. Those expecting a conventional lavender fougere will be caught off guard by how far the base drifts from the opening. That contrast is the point, and it is what keeps Burning Barbershop interesting well past the first hour.

When to Wear

Burning Barbershop wears best in cool weather, particularly autumn and early winter, when the smoke and hay in the base feel grounded rather than heavy. It suits low-key evening outings, weekend mornings indoors, or any setting where a fragrance can breathe without competing with a crowd. It is not suited to formal events or enclosed professional spaces where the smoky character might feel intrusive.

Who Is It For

Wearers drawn to niche fougeres with an edge and a genuine concept behind them, who find standard lavender-clean masculines too safe and want something that smells like it has a story attached.

If you enjoy Incense 01 by Swiss Arabian, the smoky, resinous overlap makes them worth comparing side by side. Browse the full D.S. & Durga collection at Aromatica, which also includes Rose Atlantic.

Available as an authentic decant in Bangladesh at Aromatica in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml.

Burning Barbershop | Aromatica