Moth To Flame Fuse
Fragrance Story
Moth To Flame by Fuse is a Floral Fruity fragrance for women and men. This is a new fragrance. Moth To Flame was launched in 2024. The nose behind this fragrance is Arfan Ramli. Top notes are Bitter Orange, Bergamot and Petitgrain; middle notes are Oud, Leather and Gaiac Wood; base note is Malaysian Oud.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Arfan Ramli
Arfan Ramli is a Malaysian perfumer known for his work with the house of Fuse. His style blends dark, complex accords with unexpected contrasts, often weaving smoky, woody, and floral elements into a single composition. Notable creations from our catalog include Fuse - Fracture, Fuse - Moth To Flame, and Fuse - Scuro Rosa, each showcasing his talent for balancing intensity with nuance.
Fragrance Notes
Character Profile
The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Moth To Flame Fuse
Essence
To wear Moth To Flame Fuse is to embrace the paradox of seduction-both the allure and the danger of being drawn too close to the fire. This fragrance, with its intoxicating blend of warmth and spice, speaks to someone who lives in the tension between desire and self-destruction, between passion and peril. They are the embodiment of The Lover archetype-one who seeks intensity in all things, for whom life is only worth living when it burns brightly.
They are not content with half-measures. Their presence is magnetic, their emotions vivid, their choices unapologetically bold. They move through the world with a sense of urgency, as though each moment must be seized before it slips away. Their philosophy is simple: to feel is to exist, and to exist is to be consumed by what one loves.
Shadow
In their highest expression, they are radiant-charismatic, generous, unafraid of vulnerability. They inspire others to live more boldly, to embrace pleasure without shame, to see beauty in the fleeting. Their passion is contagious, their loyalty unshakable when truly earned.
But the shadow of The Lover is obsession-the inability to let go, the compulsion to chase what burns them. They may mistake possession for love, intensity for meaning. When disillusioned, they can become melodramatic, manipulative, or self-destructive. Their greatest fear is indifference-to be forgotten, to fade into the mundane.
Conclusion
Their tastes are decadent but deliberate. They prefer deep reds and blacks, fabrics that cling or drape dramatically, textures that demand to be touched. Their home is a sanctuary of sensuality-dim lighting, plush furnishings, the faintest trace of incense lingering in the air. They collect art that unsettles as much as it enchants, music that thrums with longing, literature that explores the extremes of human emotion.
In relationships, they are both the flame and the moth-capable of fierce devotion, yet prone to cycles of pursuit and retreat. They crave connection but fear engulfment; they give themselves freely but resent being taken for granted. Their love is a force of nature-exhilarating, unpredictable, sometimes devastating. They are drawn to those who mirror their own intensity, yet these very bonds can become their undoing.