Apples Crave Apples Arcana Craves
At a glance
Is Apples Crave Apples Arcana Craves worth trying?
Apples Crave Apples by Arcana Craves is a Oriental fragrance for women.
- Best match
- Casual wear in Fall
- Performance feel
- Good longevity with Moderate sillage
- Signature profile
- fruity, fresh, green with Red Apple, Frosted Apple, Apple
The first impression
Apples Crave Apples by Arcana Craves is a Oriental fragrance for women. Apples Crave Apples was launched in 2015.
What shapes the scent
The perfumer behind it
Unknown Perfumer
Notes pyramid
The mood it creates
The Lover Archetype: Portrait of Apples Crave Apples Arcana Craves
Essence
The person who cherishes Apples Crave Apples by Arcana Craves is drawn to the pure, uncomplicated joy of crisp, sun-warmed fruit-a scent that evokes orchards in golden light, childhood nostalgia, and the simple pleasure of biting into something fresh and sweet. Their soul resonates with the Innocent archetype, one who seeks harmony, optimism, and a return to unspoiled beginnings. They are not naive in the pejorative sense, but rather possess a deliberate faith in goodness, a refusal to let cynicism taint their world.
Yet, the Innocent is not without shadows. Their idealism can curdle into avoidance, their sweetness into fragility. They may struggle when confronted with life’s inevitable bitterness, retreating into fantasy or denial rather than facing harsh truths.
Relationships
In love and friendship, they are generous, affectionate, and deeply loyal. They create spaces where others feel safe, valued, and free to be themselves. Their presence is like sunlight-gentle, nourishing, impossible to resist.
But their shadow emerges in conflict. They may avoid difficult conversations, smoothing over tensions with humor or distraction rather than confronting them. Their optimism can become a shield, a way to evade the messier aspects of human connection. Those who crave depth may grow frustrated with their reluctance to dwell in darkness, even when darkness must be faced.
Shadow
Their greatest flaw is their fear of corruption. They recoil from ugliness-whether in the world or in themselves-and this aversion can make them passive, even complicit, in the face of injustice. They may cling to nostalgia, longing for a past that never truly existed, rather than engaging with the imperfect present.
Yet, when balanced, their innocence is not weakness but strength. They remind others that joy is not trivial, that beauty is worth preserving, that the world, for all its cruelty, still holds sweetness.
Conclusion
They are not the hero, nor the sage, nor the rebel. They are the one who keeps the hearth warm, who finds wonder in the ordinary, who insists-despite all evidence-that life can be good. And in doing so, they make it so, if only for a moment, for themselves and those they love.
Their fragrance, Apples Crave Apples, is their manifesto: uncomplicated, bright, and unapologetically alive.