Sun Goddess Sucreabeille

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: Unknown
Moderate
Sillage
Good
Longevity
Summer
Best Season
Casual
Best For

Fragrance Story

Sun Goddess by Sucreabeille is a fragrance for women and men.

Composition Profile

coconut 100%
vanilla 85%
white floral 70%
lactonic 60%
sweet 50%
marine 40%
salty 35%
ozonic 30%
tropical 25%

About the Perfumer

Unknown Perfumer

Fragrance Notes

All Notes

Complete scent profile

Suntan Lotion Suntan Lotion
Coconut Coconut
Vanila Vanila
Salt Salt
Sea Notes Sea Notes
Ozonic notes Ozonic notes

Character Profile

The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Sun Goddess Sucreabeille

Essence

To wear Sun Goddess by Sucreabeille is to embrace the golden warmth of the sun itself-a fragrance of amber, vanilla, and coconut, radiant and indulgent, yet never cloying. The person who chooses this scent is one who seeks to embody the archetype of The Lover, not in mere sensuality, but in the full spectrum of passion-love of beauty, of life, of connection. They are drawn to the intoxicating, the rich, the decadent, yet they temper this hunger with an innate generosity, a desire to share their light with others.

Shadow

Yet, like all archetypes, The Lover has its shadow. Their pursuit of beauty can tip into hedonism, their generosity into self-neglect. They may struggle with boundaries, giving too much of themselves until they are drained, or indulging in pleasures that leave them hollow. The same warmth that draws people in can become a furnace, burning too hot, too fast.

There is also the danger of vanity-not in the superficial sense, but in the belief that life must always be beautiful, that pain must be avoided rather than integrated. They may flee from discomfort, masking sorrow with another glass of wine, another purchase, another distraction. Their shadow whispers: If you stop moving, if you stop shining, you will cease to matter.

Conclusion

Their life is an ode to pleasure, not in the shallow sense, but as a philosophy. They believe in the sacredness of joy, in the necessity of indulgence as a counterbalance to life’s inevitable suffering. Their tastes are lush-velvet fabrics, golden jewelry, sunlit rooms filled with the scent of ripe fruit and incense. They surround themselves with textures that beg to be touched, colors that demand to be seen.

In relationships, they are magnetic, not because they seek to dominate, but because they invite-others are drawn to their warmth, their willingness to listen, their ability to make even the mundane feel sacred. They are the friend who remembers birthdays with handwritten notes, the lover who turns an ordinary evening into a feast. Their generosity is not performative; it is an extension of their belief that life should be lived, not merely endured.

Their philosophy is one of abundance. They do not hoard beauty-they multiply it. A dinner party is not just a meal but a ritual; a walk in the park is not just exercise but a communion with the world. They are attuned to the small ecstasies of existence-the way sunlight filters through leaves, the sound of laughter in a crowded room, the first sip of a perfectly brewed cup of coffee.