Oahu Coconut Sunset Bath & Body Works
Fragrance Story
Oahu Coconut Sunset by Bath & Body Works is a Floral Fruity Gourmand fragrance for women. Oahu Coconut Sunset was launched in 2015. Top notes are Strelitzia, Bergamot and Coconut Blossom; middle notes are Tahitian Tiare Flower, Tuberose and Tyger Lily; base notes are Amber, Sea Notes and Incense.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Unknown Perfumer
Fragrance Notes
Oahu Coconut Sunset Bath & Body Works by Bath & Body Works offers a distinctive olfactory experience that stands out from other fragrances in its category.
Crafted with the finest ingredients and a blend of traditional and modern perfumery techniques, this fragrance represents the pinnacle of the perfumer's art.
Oahu Coconut Sunset Bath & Body Works embodies the distinctive style of Bath & Body Works while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Oahu Coconut Sunset Bath & Body Works
Essence
To wear Oahu Coconut Sunset is to embrace warmth, sensuality, and the fleeting beauty of golden hours. This fragrance-tropical, sweet, yet tempered by a whisper of salt-belongs to one who lives through the senses, who seeks pleasure not as indulgence but as a sacred act. Their soul is most alive in moments of connection, in the touch of sun on skin, in laughter shared over drinks at dusk. They are, above all, the Lover-an archetype of passion, devotion, and the eternal chase for beauty.
Shadow
Yet devotion can become dependence. The Lover’s greatest fear is abandonment, the fading of warmth. When love is withheld, they may cling too tightly, mistaking possession for passion. Their hunger for beauty can tip into hedonism-another glass of wine, another reckless kiss, anything to stave off the dread of emptiness.
They may also grow resentful when their affections are not mirrored. If their partner or friends do not match their fervor, they may withdraw into melancholy, convinced they are unloved. Their idealism about romance can blind them to the complexities of real relationships-they crave the cinematic, the perfect moment, and may grow disillusioned when life refuses to conform to their fantasies.
The Lover is neither naive nor frivolous. Their pursuit of beauty is a rebellion against the mundane, a refusal to let life become a series of obligations. But they must learn that love is not always a sunset-sometimes it is the steady glow of dawn, quiet but enduring.
When balanced, they teach others how to live with open hands, how to find ecstasy in the ordinary. When unbalanced, they risk drowning in their own longing. Yet even their flaws are born from an excess of life, not a lack of it. To know them is to be reminded that existence is not merely endured-it is to be tasted, savored, and, above all, felt.
Conclusion
Their world is one of vivid impressions. They surround themselves with textures-soft linens, sun-bleached wood, the worn pages of poetry books. Their home is an altar to comfort: seashells on windowsills, candles that smell of vanilla and amber, a record player spinning bossa nova or Stevie Nicks. They dress in flowing fabrics, in colors that mimic the horizon-coral, gold, deep blues-as if trying to wear the sunset itself.
Philosophy, for them, is not found in cold abstraction but in the tangible. They believe in the holiness of small joys: the first sip of coffee in the morning, the weight of a lover’s hand in theirs, the way music can make a room feel infinite. Their values are rooted in presence-they disdain the hurried, the transactional, the purely utilitarian. Life, to them, must be felt deeply or not at all.
Relationships are their masterpiece. They love generously, with an almost theatrical intensity. Friends are drawn to their warmth, their ability to make even a casual gathering feel like a celebration. Romantic partners find themselves enveloped in devotion-letters left on pillows, slow dances in the kitchen, a gaze that makes the ordinary feel sacred.