Acai Berries & Satin Sweet Essentials

Unisex
Eau de Parfum
Year: 2018
Moderate
Sillage
Good
Longevity
Summer
Best Season
Evening
Best For

Fragrance Story

Acai Berries & Satin by Sweet Essentials is a Oriental fragrance for women and men. Acai Berries & Satin was launched in 2018.

Composition Profile

fruity 100%
rose 85%
sweet 70%
coconut 60%
citrus 50%
tropical 40%

About the Perfumer

Unknown Perfumer

Fragrance Notes

All Notes

Complete scent profile

Acai Berry Acai Berry
Strawberry Strawberry
Rose Rose
Coconut Coconut
Lemon Lemon
Oily Notes Oily Notes

Character Profile

The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Acai Berries & Satin Sweet Essentials

Essence

To wear Acai Berries & Satin Sweet Essentials is to embrace the intoxicating dance of pleasure and desire. This fragrance-juicy, velvety, warm-speaks of a soul who luxuriates in the sensory world, who seeks beauty not as an abstract ideal but as a living, breathing experience. The person who chooses this scent is, at their core, an embodiment of the Lover archetype, driven by passion, connection, and the pursuit of delight.

Their life is an ode to the senses. They surround themselves with textures that beg to be touched-satin sheets, cashmere throws, the smooth curve of a well-loved ceramic mug. Their taste in music leans toward the lush and immersive: R&B that hums with intimacy, jazz that curls around the room like smoke, or the decadent swell of a symphony. In art, they favor the romantic-not the saccharine, but the kind that thrums with life, where color and form seem to pulse with emotion.

Philosophically, they are hedonists in the truest sense-not mere pleasure-seekers, but those who believe that joy is a form of wisdom. They reject asceticism as a denial of life’s richness, yet they are not frivolous. Their hedonism is deliberate, a rebellion against the gray pragmatism of the modern world. They believe in savoring, in lingering, in letting a moment unfold like a slow-blooming flower.

Style & Aesthetic

They dress in a way that feels like an extension of their inner world-soft fabrics that drape and flow, rich jewel tones or muted earth shades that whisper rather than shout. Their home is a sanctuary, filled with candles that cast golden light, books with dog-eared pages, and the faint scent of something sweet lingering in the air. They are drawn to the tactile: the weight of a leather-bound journal, the coolness of a marble countertop beneath their fingertips.

Their flaw here is a tendency toward excess. They may accumulate beautiful things not out of greed, but out of a fear of emptiness-as if without these sensory anchors, they might dissolve into the mundane. They must learn that true richness lies not in possession, but in presence.

Relationships

To love them is to be enveloped-not smothered, but held in a space where every glance, every touch, is weighted with meaning. They are generous lovers, attentive friends, the kind of person who remembers how you take your coffee and the way your voice softens when you’re tired. Their relationships are deep, often intense, because they cannot abide superficial connections.

Yet this intensity carries a shadow. Their need for emotional and sensory fulfillment can tip into possessiveness, a fear of losing the warmth they so cherish. They may cling to fading romances, mistaking nostalgia for love, or grow restless when the initial thrill of a connection fades. Their greatest challenge is learning that not all beauty is meant to be held-some must be released, like perfume into the air.

Shadow

The Lover’s greatest strength-their capacity for deep feeling-can also be their undoing. When unbalanced, they may become overly dependent on external validation, mistaking admiration for self-worth. Their aversion to discomfort can lead them to avoid necessary conflicts, smoothing over tensions with charm rather than facing them. And in their quest for beauty, they may sometimes confuse the appearance of happiness with its substance.

Yet this shadow is not a condemnation, but a call to integration. The wisest Lovers learn that true fulfillment comes not from endless consumption of beauty, but from creating it-not just in objects, but in moments, in relationships, in the quiet artistry of a life well-lived.

Conclusion

They are not naive. They know the world is harsh, that love fades, that pleasure is fleeting. But they choose, again and again, to lean into the sweetness anyway. To them, life is not a problem to be solved, but a mystery to be tasted-one ripe berry, one silken touch, one lingering kiss at a time.

And so they wear their fragrance like a vow: I will not numb myself to joy.