Maa Arwaak Rasasi

For Women
Eau de Parfum
Year: Unknown
Strong
Sillage
Very Good
Longevity
Fall
Best Season
Evening
Best For

Fragrance Story

Maa Arwaak by Rasasi is a Floral Fruity Gourmand fragrance for women. Top notes are Cranberry, Floral Notes, Pink Pepper and Tamarind; middle notes are Rose, Cacao Pod, Violet and Coffee blossom; base notes are Vanilla, Patchouli and Massoia.

Composition Profile

floral 100%
rose 85%
warm spicy 70%
woody 60%
sweet 50%
vanilla 40%
fruity 35%
patchouli 30%
powdery 25%
soft spicy 20%

About the Perfumer

Unknown Perfumer

Fragrance Notes

Top Notes

First impression · 15-30 min

Cranberry Cranberry
Floral Notes Floral Notes
Pink Pepper Pink Pepper
Tamarind Tamarind

Heart Notes

Core character · 2-4 hours

Rose Rose
Cacao Pod Cacao Pod
Violet Violet
Coffee blossom Coffee blossom

Base Notes

Lasting impression · 4+ hours

Vanilla Vanilla
Patchouli Patchouli
Massoia Massoia
Unique Character

Maa Arwaak Rasasi by Rasasi offers a distinctive olfactory experience that stands out from other fragrances in its category.

Artisanal Creation

Crafted with the finest ingredients and a blend of traditional and modern perfumery techniques, this fragrance represents the pinnacle of the perfumer's art.

Signature Style

Maa Arwaak Rasasi embodies the distinctive style of Rasasi while adding a unique chapter to their fragrance portfolio.

Character Profile

The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Maa Arwaak Rasasi

Essence

The person who chooses Maa Arwaak Rasasi as their signature scent is not merely drawn to fragrance-they seek transformation. They embody the Alchemist, an archetype that thrives on depth, refinement, and the pursuit of hidden meaning. Like the perfumer who blends rare ingredients into an intoxicating elixir, this individual crafts their life with intention, turning the mundane into the sublime.

Yet, the Alchemist is not just a seeker of beauty-they are also a seeker of truth. They understand that every scent, like every experience, carries layers of memory, emotion, and symbolism. Their love for Maa Arwaak-a fragrance rich with oud, spices, and smoky resins-reveals a soul attuned to the sensual and the sacred, the earthly and the ephemeral.

To wear Maa Arwaak Rasasi is to declare a love for the profound, the complex, the alchemical. This person is not content with surface pleasures-they crave the kind of beauty that lingers, that transforms, that demands something of the soul. They are both artist and philosopher, hedonist and ascetic, forever balancing the desire for transcendence with the need to remain grounded.

In the end, their life is not about arriving at a destination but about the art of distillation-refining experience into wisdom, passion into purpose, and the self into something ever more luminous.

Relationships

They do not engage in idle chatter. When they speak, their words are measured, often laced with wit or poetic allusion. Their friendships are few but enduring-they attract those who appreciate nuance and are unafraid of darkness. In love, they are intense but not possessive; they seek a partner who is both an equal and a mystery, someone who can match their intellectual curiosity and emotional depth.

Yet, their very refinement can become a barrier. They may grow impatient with those who lack their perceptiveness, dismissing simpler joys as trivial. Their standards, both for themselves and others, can verge on the unattainable, leaving them oscillating between deep connection and solitary retreat.

Shadow

The Alchemist’s greatest strength-their relentless pursuit of meaning-can also be their undoing. When their experiments in self-transformation fail, they may spiral into self-reproach. Their love for the rare and exquisite can tip into elitism, an unconscious disdain for the ordinary. And their introspective nature, if unchecked, can lead to isolation, as they become so engrossed in their inner world that they neglect the raw, unrefined beauty of life as it is.

Conclusion

Their tastes are deliberate, never accidental. They prefer the weight of aged leather-bound books over digital screens, the slow burn of single-malt whiskey over hasty pleasures. Their wardrobe is a study in contrasts-structured blazers softened by flowing silks, dark hues punctuated by flashes of gold or deep burgundy. They do not follow trends; they cultivate an aesthetic that feels like an extension of their inner world.

Philosophically, they are drawn to mysticism and existentialism in equal measure. They might quote Rumi one moment and Nietzsche the next, finding truth in paradox. They believe life is not merely to be lived but deciphered, and they approach relationships, work, and art with the same analytical passion.