New Vibes (Sea Salt + Orchid) Diffuser Set
Imagine walking into a room that smells like a sea breeze tangled with orchids—that’s what this diffuser does, every single time.
What It Is:
The New Vibes Diffuser Set is a minimalist fragrance system that combines earthy, floral, and sweet notes into something you’ll never be able to explain to guests, but they’ll notice immediately. Handmade for people who pretend they don’t care about aesthetics while secretly obsessing over them, this diffuser blends bright orange and ozone top notes, a sea salt and orchid flower mid-layer, and a base of amber and tonka bean. The result is a scent that feels both coastal and cosmic, like a beach house that doubles as a philosophy seminar.
Why You’ll Actually Use It:
Because candles require fire, and fire is a commitment. This reed diffuser just sits there, diffusing, asking nothing of you while still making your home or workspace smell like the idea of “calm.” It lasts up to three months, which is both longer than most relationships and just short enough to pretend you’ll reinvent yourself before it runs out.
Key Details:
Vessel Size: 5.5" tall x 3.35" wide (14cm x 8.5cm)
Vessel Volume: 80 mL / 2.7 oz
Scent Notes: Floral, Sweet, Earthy
Includes: 1 diffuser vessel, 1 tube of fragrance oil, 6 black reeds
Longevity: Up to 3 months of fragrance
Design: Modern, minimalist, intentionally sleek
A diffuser that turns “just air” into an argument for why vibes might actually be real.
About the brand: Powered by People
Powered by People is basically what happens when “shopping small” gets a global operating system. Instead of mass-produced sameness, they connect you with makers who are spinning out hand-dyed textiles, hand-thrown ceramics, and jewelry that feels like it was pulled from an alternate reality where craftsmanship never went out of style. The through-line isn’t just aesthetics—it’s the insistence that every object has both utility and a backstory, often rooted in sustainable practices, reclaimed materials, and cultural traditions that would otherwise get bulldozed by the modern marketplace. In short: they’re trying to prove that conscious consumption doesn’t have to look like homework.
