Liquides Imaginaires Navis Unisex Edp 100ML

65.210 KD 48.300 KD
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Every civilization that has ever existed was shaped by water. The rivers that fed the first cities. The seas that carried trade and conquest. The oceans that separated the known from the imagined and dared the brave to cross. Kuwait itself was born from the sea — a nation of pearl divers and maritime traders whose dhows carved routes across the Arabian Gulf long before the first oil well was drilled. Navis — Latin for ship — is the fragrance of that crossing. Not the departure, not the arrival, but the vast, uncertain, transformative space in between. The part where you can no longer see the shore you left and the shore you're seeking hasn't yet appeared. The part where you are most alone and most alive.


Liquides Imaginaires commissioned perfumer Nadège Le Garlantezec to compose Navis — a choice that reveals the house's intentions as clearly as the notes themselves. Le Garlantezec is a Breton perfumer raised on the Atlantic coast of France, where the sea is not a backdrop but a presence — shaping the weather, the mood, the identity of everyone who lives beside it. She brings to Navis an understanding of marine character that no landlocked nose can replicate. This isn't a perfume about the ocean as a concept. It's a perfume about the ocean as an experience — the sting of spray, the mineral depth of open water, the strange peace that arrives when you stop fighting the current and let it carry you.


The opening is a breach — the moment the hull breaks through the first wave. Grapefruit arrives with a sharp, bitter citrus intensity that reads as salt air with attitude — not the gentle seaside freshness of a commercial aquatic fragrance, but the real, bracing, slightly aggressive sting of wind hitting wet skin. It's energizing and confrontational simultaneously, and it sets the emotional register for everything that follows: this is not a gentle journey. Bergamot enters alongside the grapefruit with its characteristic bitter-sweet complexity, adding depth and sophistication to the citrus while preventing the grapefruit from reading as one-dimensional. The bergamot here is pulled toward its most mineral, most astringent facet — it smells less like fruit and more like the light refracting through seawater, that luminous, cold-bright quality that makes you squint and lean forward at the same time. Pink pepper provides the opening's emotional bridge — its rose-tinted warmth softens the citrus's sharp edges while adding an aromatic spice that hints at the more exotic territories waiting in the heart. The pink pepper also introduces the first suggestion of human warmth into the composition — the reminder that someone is on this ship, that the ocean isn't empty, that the crossing has a purpose.


Then the ocean reveals its true face — and it's not what you expect. Algae — specifically Laminaria digitata, the great brown kelp of the North Atlantic — enters the heart with a character so far from conventional aquatic perfumery that it redefines what a marine fragrance can be. This isn't the clean, ozonic, salt-breeze marine note of designer fragrances. This is the real ocean — the one that smells of living things, of kelp forests and tidal pools, of mineral-rich water that has touched every coast on earth. The algae note brings a vegetal, slightly iodine quality that reads as undeniably marine but utterly unlike any marine fragrance you've encountered. It's dense, textured, and strangely beautiful — the kind of note that makes you realize how simplified and sanitized most ocean fragrances really are. In Kuwait, where the Arabian Gulf's warm, shallow waters carry their own distinctive marine character — richer, warmer, more alive than the cold Atlantic — Navis's algae heart resonates with genuine coastal familiarity rather than perfumed approximation. The "rare spices" in the heart function as the cargo of Navis's journey — the exotic materials that ships have carried across water for millennia, the pepper and cinnamon and cardamom and frankincense that traveled the same maritime routes that shaped the Arabian Gulf's history. These spices are present as whispers and suggestions rather than declarations — aromatic threads that weave through the algae's marine depth, adding warmth and complexity without overwhelming the oceanic character. They represent the reason the ship set sail in the first place: to bring back what couldn't be found at home.


The base is where Navis drops anchor — and the anchoring is profound. Oakmoss arrives with its deep, damp, forest-floor earthiness — a note that connects the ocean to the land, the voyage to the return, the water to the earth it erodes and nourishes. Oakmoss in perfumery carries a distinctive quality that reads as ancient and grounded — it's the smell of stone and moss and time, and its appearance in Navis's base gives the composition a gravity that prevents the marine character from floating away into mere freshness. Amyris — often called West Indian sandalwood — enters with a creamy, softly woody warmth that's gentler and more translucent than true sandalwood, creating a bridge between the oakmoss's earthiness and the cedarwood's architecture. Cedarwood provides the base's structural framework — dry, clean, and enduring — the same wood that has built ships for thousands of years, now providing the skeleton upon which the oakmoss and amyris hang their warmth.


The combined dry-down is extraordinary — a woody, mossy, marine-adjacent base that doesn't smell like the ocean at all, but smells like what the ocean leaves behind: driftwood on a beach, salt crusted on weathered timber, the ghost of a voyage preserved in wood and stone and time. It persists for 10 to 12 hours on skin, with the oakmoss-cedarwood foundation lasting well beyond 24 hours on fabric — a scent trail that carries the memory of water long after the crossing is complete.


On a man's skin, the grapefruit, oakmoss, and cedarwood dominate, creating a fragrance of mineral, woody authority — a man who smells like the coast after a storm, powerful and still. On a woman's skin, the algae, pink pepper, and amyris rise, revealing a fragrance of strange, unconventional beauty — a woman who doesn't follow the aquatic-floral script but sails her own course entirely. On both, the rare spices thread through the entire wearing experience, connecting the fresh opening to the grounded base with aromatic continuity that rewards repeated attention.



Key Features

  • 100ml Eau de Parfum concentration — full-size ritual bottle with 10–12 hours of skin presence and oakmoss-cedarwood base persistence extending beyond 24 hours on fabric
  • Composed by Nadège Le Garlantezec — Breton perfumer with deep Atlantic coastal heritage, bringing authentic marine understanding to the composition rather than conceptual interpretation
  • Grapefruit and bergamot opening — sharp, mineral citrus that reads as salt air and open water rather than fruity freshness — bracing, energizing, and intentionally confrontational
  • Laminaria digitata algae heart — real kelp, not ozonic approximation — a vegetal, iodine-rich marine note that redefines what oceanic fragrance can be, connecting to Kuwait's own Gulf coastal identity
  • Rare spice cargo — unnamed aromatic threads weaving through the marine heart, representing the trade goods that ships have carried across Arabian waters for millennia
  • Oakmoss, amyris, and cedarwood base — ancient, grounded, and enduring — driftwood and stone and the memory of water preserved in wood
  • Genuinely adaptive unisex composition — mineral-woody authority on masculine skin, strange marine beauty on feminine skin, both expressions complete and compelling
  • Liquides Imaginaires artisanal presentation — the house's signature sacred-ritual bottle design — the vessel that carries the voyage


Why Customers Love It

  • Finally — a marine fragrance for adults — Navis replaces the sanitized, ozonic aquatic clichés with real oceanic character — algae, salt, mineral depth — a marine fragrance with intellectual weight and genuine complexity
  • The algae note is unlike anything else — Laminaria digitata creates a marine experience that no other fragrance on the market delivers — vegetal, iodine-rich, and strangely beautiful — the real ocean instead of the postcard
  • Resonates with Gulf coastal identity — Kuwaiti wearers who grew up beside the Arabian Gulf recognize Navis's marine character as authentic rather than perfumed — it captures the warmth and life of real coastal water, not the cold, abstract ocean of European aquatics
  • The rare spices carry cultural weight — the unnamed spices in the heart evoke the maritime spice trade that built the Gulf's prosperity — wearing Navis feels like carrying that history on your skin
  • Oakmoss anchors the composition masterfully — the deep, damp, earthy base prevents the marine character from becoming ethereal or fleeting — Navis has gravity that most aquatic fragrances lack entirely
  • Niche collectors respect it — the Le Garlantezec composition and the algae-forward heart make Navis one of the most discussed fragrances in niche collector communities — wearing it signals genuine taste and curiosity
  • The dry-down haunts you — the driftwood-oakmoss-cedarwood base creates a skin scent that lingers for hours after you've forgotten you're wearing fragrance — the ghost of the ocean on your skin, reminding you of the crossing


Best For

  • Occasion: Coastal gatherings, travel, creative environments, evening events, spaces where originality matters, gifting for fragrance explorers
  • Season: Spring and summer peak — the grapefruit-algae opening thrives in warmth and humidity; evenings year-round when the oakmoss base provides grounded comfort; Kuwait's coastal season from April through October when the sea calls
  • Gender: Unisex — the marine-woody structure transcends gendered fragrance conventions entirely, adapting to the wearer's chemistry and personality
  • Style/Personality: The voyager — someone drawn to horizons, who believes the most interesting things happen in the space between departure and arrival, who trusts the crossing more than the destination
  • Skin Chemistry: The algae and oakmoss notes develop extraordinary depth on warm skin where the mineral and vegetal qualities can express fully — Kuwait's coastal climate creates ideal conditions for Navis's marine character to breathe
  • Usage Scenarios: Coastal weekends at Messilah and Khiran, sailing trips along the Gulf, spring evenings when the air carries salt, travel days that demand a fragrance matching the journey, creative meetings where originality is the currency, moments when you want to feel connected to water and its ancient power


How To Use

  1. Apply to the forearms and walk toward the wind — Navis's grapefruit-algae opening comes alive in moving air. Apply to the inner forearms, then walk outside into a breeze. The airflow across the skin activates the marine notes in a way that still air cannot replicate — you'll smell the ocean opening around you like a wave breaking forward.
  2. Give the heart 20 minutes to surface — the algae note needs time to emerge from the grapefruit-pepper opening. The first ten minutes are the departure — sharp, bright, energizing. The algae heart is the open water — deeper, stranger, more compelling. Don't judge Navis until you've reached the heart. The journey is the point.
  3. Spray on fabric for the driftwood dry-down — a single spray on a cotton shirt or linen scarf captures Navis's base at its most evocative — the oakmoss-cedarwood foundation reads as sun-dried driftwood on fabric, warm and weathered and carrying the memory of salt. It persists for 48+ hours and improves with time.
  4. Wear it on water-adjacent days — Navis's character amplifies near actual water. The combination of the fragrance's marine notes and the real ocean creates a sensory feedback loop — each intensifies the other. Take it to the coast. Take it on a boat. Let it belong where it was born.
  5. Two sprays for daily wear, three for evening — the algae note projects with an unusual intensity in warm, humid environments. Start with two sprays and assess the room response before adding more. Navis should invite curiosity, not announce arrival.
  6. Store away from humidity — the oakmoss is sensitive — unlike most fragrance bases, oakmoss degrades in humid environments, gradually losing its depth and earthiness. Keep Navis in its box in a dry, cool cabinet — not in a bathroom where shower steam accelerates the degradation. The drier the storage, the longer the base maintains its ancient, grounded character.