Mojito Marcoccia

Unisex
Eau de Toilette
Year: 2013

At a glance

Is Mojito Marcoccia worth trying?

Mojito by Marcoccia is a Aromatic Fruity fragrance for women and men.

Best match
Casual wear in Summer
Performance feel
Moderate longevity with Moderate sillage
Signature profile
citrus, aromatic, woody with Lime, Mint, Bergamot

The first impression

Mojito by Marcoccia is a Aromatic Fruity fragrance for women and men. Mojito was launched in 2013. The nose behind this fragrance is Andrea Marcoccia. Top notes are Lime and Mint; middle notes are Bergamot and Cedar; base notes are Vetiver and Sugar.

What shapes the scent

citrus 100%
aromatic 85%
woody 70%
green 60%
fresh spicy 50%
sweet 40%
earthy 35%
vanilla 30%

The perfumer behind it

Andrea Marcoccia

Andrea Marcoccia

Andrea Marcoccia is a perfumer known for creating fragrances for Aqua di Ponza and Bottega del Profumo. His work includes Aqua Di Ponza and several scents for Bottega del Profumo such as Piazza Delle Cinque Lune, Piazza Esedra, Via Degli Avignonesi, Via Dei Condotti, Via Del Corso, Via Di Campo Marzio, and Via Margutta. These compositions often evoke Italian landscapes and urban atmospheres.

Notes pyramid

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Lime Lime
Mint Mint

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Bergamot Bergamot
Cedar Cedar

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Vetiver Vetiver
Sugar Sugar

The mood it creates

The Explorer Archetype: Portrait of Mojito Marcoccia

Essence

Mojito Marcoccia embodies the Explorer archetype, its lime-mint burst like a passport stamp from someplace vibrant. The fragrance doesn't just evoke a cocktail - it captures the moment when vacation energy infuses daily life. Bergamot and cedar middle notes suggest someone always planning their next adventure, while vetiver and sugar in the base promise they'll find sweetness wherever they roam.

This is for those who treat life as uncharted territory. The aromatic freshness is a rallying cry against routine, each application a reminder that curiosity is the best compass.

Style & Aesthetic

Their wardrobe is ready for detours: breathable linen shirts, broken-in leather sandals, a sunhat that's seen three continents. They accessorize with souvenirs that have stories - a belt from a Marrakech tannery, earrings bartered for in Bali. Even at home, they wear clothes that could transition straight to a beachside bar.

Their living space looks like a well-curated hostel: maps pinned with colored tacks, shelves of travel memoirs dog-eared at the best parts. The aesthetic says "I might not be here long" in the most inviting way.

Philosophy & Values

They measure wealth in experiences, not possessions. For them, getting lost is just an alternative route to discovery. The mojito accord represents their belief that life should be refreshing, never stagnant - even if that means occasionally starting over elsewhere.

They value adaptability above all. Like the fragrance's quick transition from citrus to woody notes, they pride themselves on blending into new environments while retaining their essence.

Relationships

Their friends know them as the one who'll suggest a spontaneous road trip when everyone else is making five-year plans. They collect people like seashells - each friendship unique to its time and place, cherished even if years pass between meetings.

Romantically, they need partners who understand their restlessness. The ideal match is someone who'll either join their adventures or welcome them home without chains, knowing the vetiver in their soul needs room to grow.

Lifestyle

Their refrigerator usually contains international condiments and questionable leftovers. Mornings might find them booking last-minute train tickets; evenings are for language apps and planning hypothetical itineraries. Even their work life tends toward the mobile - freelance gigs that fund the next journey.

Weekends mean exploring their own city like tourists, seeking out hidden alleys or immigrant-run eateries where the menus aren't translated. They've mastered the art of creating adventure anywhere.

Shadow

Their constant motion can become avoidance. The sugar-vetiver base warns that no amount of new horizons will sweeten an unsettled heart. There's risk in always being the traveler who observes life without fully participating.

They may also struggle with depth, skimming surfaces like lime zest atop a drink. The cedar's durability reminds them that some roots are worth growing.

Conclusion

Mojito Marcoccia is liquid wanderlust for those who believe the best stories happen off the planned path. Like the drink that inspired it, this fragrance is meant to be shared with new friends under unfamiliar skies. Its green freshness is a promise: adventure isn't a place, but a way of moving through the world.