Annabel's Birthday Cake Marissa Zappas
Fragrance Story
Annabel's Birthday Cake by Marissa Zappas is a fragrance for women and men. Annabel's Birthday Cake was launched in 2021. The nose behind this fragrance is Marissa Zappas. Top notes are latex, Sugar, Lemon and Heliotrope; middle notes are Whipped Cream, Cupcake, Sugar, Rose Petals and Tuberose; base notes are Honeycomb, Cacao Pod and Tonka Bean.
Composition Profile
About the Perfumer
Marissa Zappas
Marissa Zappas is an independent perfumer whose eponymous line includes Annabel's Birthday Cake, Carnival Of Souls, and Petrichor. Her fragrances often tell narrative-driven stories, blending gourmand, floral, and atmospheric elements. She is known for her artistic, conceptual approach to perfumery.
Fragrance Notes
Annabel's Birthday Cake Marissa Zappas by Marissa Zappas 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.
Annabel's Birthday Cake Marissa Zappas embodies the distinctive style of Marissa Zappas while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.
Character Profile
The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Annabel's Birthday Cake Marissa Zappas
Essence
To wear Annabel’s Birthday Cake by Marissa Zappas is to embrace indulgence without shame-a scent that drips with vanilla frosting, candied cherries, and the warmth of buttercream. The person who adores this fragrance is not merely drawn to sweetness; they are in love with the idea of pleasure, of life as a celebration. They embody the Lover archetype, one who seeks beauty, sensuality, and emotional richness in all things. Yet, like all archetypes, this one has its shadows-a tendency toward excess, a fear of emptiness, a hunger that can never be fully satisfied.
Style & Aesthetic
Their world is a carefully curated feast for the senses. They surround themselves with textures that beg to be touched: velvet cushions, silk scarves, the soft fur of a well-loved pet. Their home is a sanctuary of warmth, filled with flickering candles, fresh flowers, and the faint hum of jazz or disco playing in the background. They are drawn to colors that shimmer-gold, deep red, blush pink-as if life itself should be gilded.
In fashion, they favor decadence over minimalism. A vintage fur coat thrown over a slip dress, a silk blouse unbuttoned just enough to suggest intimacy without revealing too much. They are not afraid of appearing excessive; in fact, they take pride in it. Their style is a declaration: I refuse to live in a world stripped of delight.
Philosophy & Values
They believe in the sacredness of pleasure. Not in the shallow sense of mere gratification, but in the deeper, almost spiritual conviction that joy is a form of resistance against life’s inevitable suffering. They quote Rilke: "You must change your life." But for them, change does not mean austerity-it means learning to savor more deeply.
Their values are rooted in connection. Love, to them, is not just an emotion but an act of devotion-to friends, to lovers, to the small rituals that make existence meaningful. They are the one who remembers birthdays, who brings dessert to every gathering, who insists on one more drink, one more dance, because why not?
Yet beneath this philosophy lies a quiet fear: that without these pleasures, life would be unbearably hollow. They do not merely enjoy beauty; they need it, like air.
Relationships
They are magnetic, effortlessly drawing people in with their warmth and generosity. They give freely-compliments, gifts, their undivided attention-because they understand that intimacy is built through shared indulgence. Their friendships are deep, their romances intense. They love grand gestures: handwritten letters, surprise trips, midnight feasts.
But their shadow emerges here, too. Their need for emotional intensity can border on possessiveness. They fear being forgotten, replaced, deemed ordinary. When love fades or friendships drift, they take it as a personal failure, a sign that they were not enough. They may cling too tightly or seek validation in fleeting affections, mistaking passion for permanence.
Shadow
The Lover’s greatest weakness is their refusal of emptiness. They fill silences with chatter, solitude with company, doubt with another glass of wine. They struggle with stillness, with the moments when life does not taste like cake. When disappointment strikes, they do not grieve-they distract. A new obsession, a new romance, a new flavor to drown out the bitterness.
This avoidance can make them seem superficial, though they are anything but. Their depth is hidden beneath layers of frosting, as if they fear that without it, no one would stay to taste what lies beneath.
Conclusion
They are both enchanting and exhausting, a creature of contradictions. They teach others how to love more fiercely, how to find beauty in the mundane. But they must also learn that not every moment needs to be sweet-that sometimes, the most profound truths are found in the quiet, the unadorned, the bittersweet.
To know them is to be invited to the feast. But the real challenge-for them and for those who love them-is learning to sit at the table even when the last crumb is gone.