Strawberry Shortcake Marmol & Son

For Women
Eau de Toilette
Year: 2005
Moderate
Sillage
Moderate
Longevity
Spring
Best Season
Casual
Best For

Fragrance Story

Strawberry Shortcake by Marmol & Son is a Aromatic Fruity fragrance for women. Strawberry Shortcake was launched in 2005. Top notes are Mirabelle Plum, Apple and Citruses; middle notes are Sugar and Red Berries; base notes are Amberwood, Vanilla and Custard.

Composition Profile

sweet 100%
amber 85%
woody 70%
vanilla 60%
fruity 50%
warm spicy 40%
lactonic 35%

About the Perfumer

Unknown Perfumer

Fragrance Notes

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Mirabelle Plum Mirabelle Plum
Apple Apple
Citruses Citruses

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Sugar Sugar
Red Berries Red Berries

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Amberwood Amberwood
Vanilla Vanilla
Custard Custard

Character Profile

The Archetype Archetype: Portrait of Strawberry Shortcake Marmol & Son

Essence

This person is most closely aligned with The Innocent, an archetype defined by purity, optimism, and a childlike wonder toward life. The Innocent seeks happiness, simplicity, and safety, often retreating into nostalgia or idealized visions of reality. Their choice of Strawberry Shortcake Marmol & Son-a fragrance evoking sugary sweetness, playful nostalgia, and whimsy-reflects their deep-seated longing for a world untainted by cynicism.

Yet, like all archetypes, The Innocent has its shadow. Beneath the sweetness lies a fear of harsh truths, an aversion to conflict, and a tendency toward escapism. The scent they adore is not merely a preference but a psychological refuge-a way to preserve the delicate fantasy they have constructed around themselves.

Style & Aesthetic

Their world is curated with intention, favoring soft colors, rounded shapes, and objects that evoke warmth. Their wardrobe leans toward playful femininity-floral prints, pastel knits, or vintage-inspired pieces that recall childhood storybooks. They may collect trinkets, plush toys, or old-fashioned sweets, surrounding themselves with tactile comforts.

Their home is a sanctuary of coziness, filled with fairy lights, mismatched ceramics, and the scent of baked goods. Even if they live in a bustling city, their space feels like a cottage in a story-safe, insulated, and slightly removed from the sharp edges of modernity.

Philosophy & Values

They believe the world should be kinder, gentler, more forgiving. Their moral compass is guided by compassion, often to the point of naivety. They dislike confrontation, preferring harmony even at the cost of their own needs. Their optimism is both their greatest strength and their most dangerous blind spot-they trust too easily, assume the best of people, and are slow to recognize malice.

Their philosophy is simple: Life should be sweet. They resist bitterness, both in taste and in temperament. They may reject intellectual cynicism, seeing it as needlessly harsh, and instead embrace a worldview where love and kindness are the ultimate truths.

Relationships

In friendships and love, they are the caretaker-the one who bakes cookies for heartbroken friends, remembers birthdays with handwritten notes, and offers hugs instead of hard truths. They attract people who crave warmth, but they also risk being taken advantage of by those who mistake their kindness for weakness.

Romantically, they seek partners who will protect their tenderness, often drawn to those with a contrasting strength-someone who can shield them from life’s cruelties. Yet, if they are not careful, they may fall into the trap of idealizing their partner, refusing to see flaws until reality forces their hand.

Shadow

The Innocent’s greatest weakness is their refusal to face darkness. They may avoid difficult conversations, suppress anger, or deny painful truths to preserve their illusion of harmony. When reality intrudes-betrayal, loss, failure-they are ill-equipped to handle it, often retreating further into fantasy or becoming passive-aggressive rather than confronting the issue directly.

Their optimism can also manifest as a lack of ambition, preferring comfort over growth. They may resist change, clinging to familiar routines even when they no longer serve them. And if their kindness is repeatedly exploited, they risk either becoming resentful or doubling down on their sweetness, refusing to learn from experience.

Conclusion

To wear Strawberry Shortcake Marmol & Son is to declare a preference for joy over jadedness, for innocence over experience. This person is not naive by accident-they choose their sweetness deliberately, as an act of resistance against a world that often rewards hardness.

Yet true wisdom for them lies in balancing their light with necessary shadows-learning when to soften the world and when to face it unflinchingly. If they can do this, their sweetness becomes not an escape, but a quiet rebellion-a refusal to let bitterness win.