
Art of Arabia I
Launched in 2023 under the Lattafa Pride sub-line, Lattafa Art of Arabia I is an Eau de Parfum that sits confidently between Arabian tradition and something genuinely modern. It leads with freshness, not heaviness, which surprises people who expect a dense, oud-driven composition from that part of the world. This one is drier, sharper, more architectural. Aromatica carries the Art of Arabia I decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes.
Fragrance Notes
Top: Bergamot, Mint
Heart: Black Tea, Ginger, Lavender
Base: Ambroxan, Frankincense, Cinnamon
The Scent
Bergamot and mint land together in the opening and they land clean, bright, and slightly cool. There is none of the sweetness that can make citrus openings feel candied. The mint here stays restrained, more like a brisk edge than anything herbal or toothpaste-adjacent. Within a few minutes, black tea starts to pull the composition inward. It is a dry, slightly astringent tea note, not milky or sweet, and it gives the heart a real sense of structure. Ginger alongside the tea adds a low-level warmth that feels spiced rather than spicy. It does not spike. Lavender threads through the middle phase and keeps things from going too austere. Most lavender in fragrances reads as barbershop or as a sweet fougere pillar, but here it plays as a connective tissue, softening the tea without sweetening it. The transition from heart to base is the best part of this fragrance. Frankincense appears quietly, not as a sharp, resinous smoke but as a slowly deepening drydown that gives the composition a contemplative, slightly ecclesiastical quality. The bergamot is long gone by this point, and the mint is only a memory, but their brightness seems to have shaped the space that the frankincense now occupies, keeping it from feeling heavy or suffocating. Ambroxan at the base delivers skin-close warmth and that characteristic musky radiance that modern Eau de Parfums rely on for lasting depth. It does not announce itself loudly but makes everything around it feel more coherent and more wearable. Cinnamon closes the loop, adding a whisper of spice that keeps the drydown from going flat or powdery. It is subtle enough that some people may not consciously register it as cinnamon, but its absence would make the base feel thinner. The overall arc is: fresh and sharp, then structured and tea-led, then warm and quietly resinous. The heart reads as unisex, even leaning slightly neutral in the tea-and-lavender phase. That is not a flaw. It is a feature for anyone who finds hard masculine markers limiting, and it makes the fragrance genuinely approachable across a wide range of personal styles and preferences.
When to Wear
Art of Arabia I is best suited for cooler evenings in autumn and winter, whether that is a formal dinner, an indoor gathering, or a well-dressed night out. The tea-and-frankincense combination earns its place in a coat-weather rotation, particularly for office evenings that extend into dinner.
Who Is It For
Someone who reaches for structured, understated compositions and wants a tea-led EDP with Arabian warmth, drawn to modern ambroxan-anchored scents without sacrificing a resinous drydown.
If you enjoy Art of Arabia III, this first chapter of the series sits in the same creative family and rewards a direct comparison. Browse the full Lattafa collection at Aromatica.
Available as an authentic decant in Bangladesh at Aromatica in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml.
Original: $342.00
-65%$342.00
$119.70Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
Launched in 2023 under the Lattafa Pride sub-line, Lattafa Art of Arabia I is an Eau de Parfum that sits confidently between Arabian tradition and something genuinely modern. It leads with freshness, not heaviness, which surprises people who expect a dense, oud-driven composition from that part of the world. This one is drier, sharper, more architectural. Aromatica carries the Art of Arabia I decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes.
Fragrance Notes
Top: Bergamot, Mint
Heart: Black Tea, Ginger, Lavender
Base: Ambroxan, Frankincense, Cinnamon
The Scent
Bergamot and mint land together in the opening and they land clean, bright, and slightly cool. There is none of the sweetness that can make citrus openings feel candied. The mint here stays restrained, more like a brisk edge than anything herbal or toothpaste-adjacent. Within a few minutes, black tea starts to pull the composition inward. It is a dry, slightly astringent tea note, not milky or sweet, and it gives the heart a real sense of structure. Ginger alongside the tea adds a low-level warmth that feels spiced rather than spicy. It does not spike. Lavender threads through the middle phase and keeps things from going too austere. Most lavender in fragrances reads as barbershop or as a sweet fougere pillar, but here it plays as a connective tissue, softening the tea without sweetening it. The transition from heart to base is the best part of this fragrance. Frankincense appears quietly, not as a sharp, resinous smoke but as a slowly deepening drydown that gives the composition a contemplative, slightly ecclesiastical quality. The bergamot is long gone by this point, and the mint is only a memory, but their brightness seems to have shaped the space that the frankincense now occupies, keeping it from feeling heavy or suffocating. Ambroxan at the base delivers skin-close warmth and that characteristic musky radiance that modern Eau de Parfums rely on for lasting depth. It does not announce itself loudly but makes everything around it feel more coherent and more wearable. Cinnamon closes the loop, adding a whisper of spice that keeps the drydown from going flat or powdery. It is subtle enough that some people may not consciously register it as cinnamon, but its absence would make the base feel thinner. The overall arc is: fresh and sharp, then structured and tea-led, then warm and quietly resinous. The heart reads as unisex, even leaning slightly neutral in the tea-and-lavender phase. That is not a flaw. It is a feature for anyone who finds hard masculine markers limiting, and it makes the fragrance genuinely approachable across a wide range of personal styles and preferences.
When to Wear
Art of Arabia I is best suited for cooler evenings in autumn and winter, whether that is a formal dinner, an indoor gathering, or a well-dressed night out. The tea-and-frankincense combination earns its place in a coat-weather rotation, particularly for office evenings that extend into dinner.
Who Is It For
Someone who reaches for structured, understated compositions and wants a tea-led EDP with Arabian warmth, drawn to modern ambroxan-anchored scents without sacrificing a resinous drydown.
If you enjoy Art of Arabia III, this first chapter of the series sits in the same creative family and rewards a direct comparison. Browse the full Lattafa collection at Aromatica.
Available as an authentic decant in Bangladesh at Aromatica in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml.











