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Al Nashama Caprice

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Al Nashama Caprice

Flankers rarely improve on the original, but Lattafa Al Nashama Caprice EDP, released in 2024, makes a genuine case for itself. It takes the Al Nashama lineage and adds a citrus-spice sharpness upfront, landing somewhere between a classic aromatic fougere and a Middle Eastern-inflected fresh woody. Aromatica carries the Lattafa Al Nashama Caprice decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes. For a budget-conscious entry into the spiced-lavender aromatic family, it punches well above its price point.

Fragrance Notes

Top: Cardamom, Ginger, Bergamot, Lemon

Heart: Lavender, Geranium, Mint

Base: Amber, Cedarwood, Patchouli, Vetiver

The Scent

Cardamom and ginger arrive in full force on the first spray, bright and slightly peppery, backed by a squeeze of bergamot and lemon that keeps things from going too heavy. The citrus is not decoration here. It does real structural work, lifting the spice so the opening feels alive rather than dense. There is a certain sharpness in these first minutes that can read as synthetic, but it sits more convincingly as intentional energy rather than a flaw. The cardamom and ginger have a raw, almost unprocessed quality, closer to a cracked pod than a polished spice extract, and the ginger underneath adds heat without crossing into food territory. The bergamot in particular plays a longer game than its brief top-note billing suggests, holding a quiet citrus brightness that bridges the spice into the heart rather than fading out early. The lemon recedes first, leaving bergamot to do the connective work as the composition transitions. That sustained bergamot presence is what keeps the opening from feeling like a blunt spice blast; it threads through the citrus-to-lavender handoff and makes the shift feel earned rather than abrupt. Within five minutes the citrus starts to recede and the spice begins to soften, and you start to feel the lavender pushing through from the heart. It does not arrive all at once. It bleeds in gradually, which is one of the better things about the composition's pacing. The lavender here is not soft or powdery. It is clean, almost barbershop-adjacent, and the mint sharpens it further into something crisp and slightly cool. This is the combination that will either win you over or leave you cold, because together they read as distinctly masculine and direct, without much ambiguity. Geranium sits quietly underneath, adding a faintly green, almost soapy quality that grounds the mint without competing with it. Some wearers may not consciously register the geranium, but its absence would make the heart feel thinner. The interplay between mint's coolness and geranium's green-soapy edge gives the heart a kind of precision that holds the lavender from going slack or diffuse. By the twenty-minute mark the whole composition has shifted from spice-forward to clean aromatic, and that is where it lives for most of the wear. The lavender-mint-geranium chord holds its shape for a good stretch before the base starts asserting itself. Then the dry-down begins, and this is where Al Nashama Caprice earns its keep. The amber comes in warm and slow, not sweet in a gourmand sense, but rich in the way Arabian ambers tend to be, with a slight resinous depth that sits behind rather than on top of the other notes. Cedarwood adds structure and a dry woodiness that keeps the amber from feeling heavy, and vetiver threads through underneath with its characteristic smoky, rooty depth. Patchouli is present but restrained, more earthen note than statement ingredient. It adds body to the base without pulling the composition toward the dark, earthy patchouli territory that can polarize audiences. The finished dry-down is smooth, warm, and genuinely well-resolved, a much more comfortable skin scent than the opening would suggest. The opening can read as slightly off-putting to some noses in those first minutes, but patience is rewarded once the heart takes over and the base begins to develop.

When to Wear

Al Nashama Caprice fits best in autumn and winter evenings, when the spice and amber have room to develop without clashing with summer heat. It works for date nights, casual dinners, or indoor occasions where you want presence without being loud. Skip the beach and the office in August.

Who Is It For

Someone who wears fougeres and aromatic woodies regularly and wants a Middle Eastern spin on the genre without paying niche prices will find this a natural fit. If you already reach for cardamom-lavender-woody structures, this adds an Arabic amber warmth that makes the formula feel less European and more textured.

If you enjoy Maahir Legacy or the lavender-spice character of La Nuit de l'Homme Le Parfum, Al Nashama Caprice sits in the same broad aromatic-woody family and is worth sampling back to back. Browse the full Lattafa collection at Aromatica.

Available as an authentic decant in Bangladesh at Aromatica in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml.

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From $123.90

Original: $354.00

-65%
Al Nashama Caprice

$354.00

$123.90

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Description

Flankers rarely improve on the original, but Lattafa Al Nashama Caprice EDP, released in 2024, makes a genuine case for itself. It takes the Al Nashama lineage and adds a citrus-spice sharpness upfront, landing somewhere between a classic aromatic fougere and a Middle Eastern-inflected fresh woody. Aromatica carries the Lattafa Al Nashama Caprice decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes. For a budget-conscious entry into the spiced-lavender aromatic family, it punches well above its price point.

Fragrance Notes

Top: Cardamom, Ginger, Bergamot, Lemon

Heart: Lavender, Geranium, Mint

Base: Amber, Cedarwood, Patchouli, Vetiver

The Scent

Cardamom and ginger arrive in full force on the first spray, bright and slightly peppery, backed by a squeeze of bergamot and lemon that keeps things from going too heavy. The citrus is not decoration here. It does real structural work, lifting the spice so the opening feels alive rather than dense. There is a certain sharpness in these first minutes that can read as synthetic, but it sits more convincingly as intentional energy rather than a flaw. The cardamom and ginger have a raw, almost unprocessed quality, closer to a cracked pod than a polished spice extract, and the ginger underneath adds heat without crossing into food territory. The bergamot in particular plays a longer game than its brief top-note billing suggests, holding a quiet citrus brightness that bridges the spice into the heart rather than fading out early. The lemon recedes first, leaving bergamot to do the connective work as the composition transitions. That sustained bergamot presence is what keeps the opening from feeling like a blunt spice blast; it threads through the citrus-to-lavender handoff and makes the shift feel earned rather than abrupt. Within five minutes the citrus starts to recede and the spice begins to soften, and you start to feel the lavender pushing through from the heart. It does not arrive all at once. It bleeds in gradually, which is one of the better things about the composition's pacing. The lavender here is not soft or powdery. It is clean, almost barbershop-adjacent, and the mint sharpens it further into something crisp and slightly cool. This is the combination that will either win you over or leave you cold, because together they read as distinctly masculine and direct, without much ambiguity. Geranium sits quietly underneath, adding a faintly green, almost soapy quality that grounds the mint without competing with it. Some wearers may not consciously register the geranium, but its absence would make the heart feel thinner. The interplay between mint's coolness and geranium's green-soapy edge gives the heart a kind of precision that holds the lavender from going slack or diffuse. By the twenty-minute mark the whole composition has shifted from spice-forward to clean aromatic, and that is where it lives for most of the wear. The lavender-mint-geranium chord holds its shape for a good stretch before the base starts asserting itself. Then the dry-down begins, and this is where Al Nashama Caprice earns its keep. The amber comes in warm and slow, not sweet in a gourmand sense, but rich in the way Arabian ambers tend to be, with a slight resinous depth that sits behind rather than on top of the other notes. Cedarwood adds structure and a dry woodiness that keeps the amber from feeling heavy, and vetiver threads through underneath with its characteristic smoky, rooty depth. Patchouli is present but restrained, more earthen note than statement ingredient. It adds body to the base without pulling the composition toward the dark, earthy patchouli territory that can polarize audiences. The finished dry-down is smooth, warm, and genuinely well-resolved, a much more comfortable skin scent than the opening would suggest. The opening can read as slightly off-putting to some noses in those first minutes, but patience is rewarded once the heart takes over and the base begins to develop.

When to Wear

Al Nashama Caprice fits best in autumn and winter evenings, when the spice and amber have room to develop without clashing with summer heat. It works for date nights, casual dinners, or indoor occasions where you want presence without being loud. Skip the beach and the office in August.

Who Is It For

Someone who wears fougeres and aromatic woodies regularly and wants a Middle Eastern spin on the genre without paying niche prices will find this a natural fit. If you already reach for cardamom-lavender-woody structures, this adds an Arabic amber warmth that makes the formula feel less European and more textured.

If you enjoy Maahir Legacy or the lavender-spice character of La Nuit de l'Homme Le Parfum, Al Nashama Caprice sits in the same broad aromatic-woody family and is worth sampling back to back. Browse the full Lattafa collection at Aromatica.

Available as an authentic decant in Bangladesh at Aromatica in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml.

Al Nashama Caprice | Aromatica