
King of Arabia
Bold, fruit-forward leather with unmistakable Arabian confidence: that is the personality Lattafa Pride built into King of Arabia Eau de Parfum, released in 2025 as part of the Pride line. It is a masculine fragrance that leans unisex in practice, built around a classic pairing of bright citrus and ripe raspberry up top, a floral-woody heart, and a leather-patchouli base that gives it real weight. Aromatica carries the Lattafa King of Arabia decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes.
Fragrance Notes
Top: Bergamot, Raspberry
Heart: Cedarwood, Osmanthus, Orris
Base: Leather, Patchouli, Vanilla
The Scent
Citrus and fruit open together rather than competing. Bergamot brings a clean, slightly bitter edge while raspberry adds sweetness without going candy-pink. It reads more like a fruity leather accord than a fruity floral, and that distinction matters. Within the first ten minutes, the raspberry starts pulling back and the heart notes begin pushing forward. Cedarwood arrives early and gives the composition a dry, woody spine. Orris follows, adding a cool, powdery iris quality that softens the wood without smothering it. Osmanthus is the quiet surprise here: it contributes a subtle apricot-floral quality that threads between the cedar and the orris, keeping the heart from going too austere. The interplay of osmanthus and orris in the mid-phase is what separates King of Arabia from blunter fruit-leather compositions. The leather appears faster than expected, sometimes bleeding through the heart before a full twenty minutes have passed. It is a firm, slightly smoky leather, not the soft suede variety. The raspberry does not vanish entirely at this stage; it lingers as a faint sweetness behind the leather, pulling it away from austerity. That residual raspberry also softens the transition between the woody heart and the heavier base materials, creating a bridge that keeps the composition from feeling abrupt. As the first hour closes, patchouli grounds the leather in dark, earthy richness, and vanilla begins to warm the whole composition from underneath. The vanilla here is not overtly sweet; it functions more as a softening agent, rounding the patchouli's earth and the leather's smoke into something cohesive and wearable. The dry-down is where King of Arabia earns its name: warm leather, patchouli, vanilla, with the orris still faintly present as a powdery trail. The osmanthus, barely perceptible at this late stage, leaves a ghost of stone-fruit warmth that keeps the base from reading as purely dark. It can read assertive and room-dominant or as a tighter, skin-close wear depending on skin chemistry. The Tom Ford Black Orchid and Oud Wood leather family gets mentioned in comparisons, though King of Arabia is clearly less smoky and considerably more fruit-forward than either.
When to Wear
King of Arabia is built for cooler weather, from autumn evenings to winter nights, where the leather and patchouli can breathe fully without turning heavy. It suits evening occasions with presence: a formal dinner, a date, or any event where a bold, confident scent is the right call. Browse the Arabians collection if you want to compare it against other richly-composed Middle Eastern fragrances.
Who Is It For
The leather lover who wants some sweetness to balance the darkness will find King of Arabia a natural fit, as will anyone who enjoys orientals and ouds but prefers fruit-leather hybrids over straight smoky compositions.
If you enjoy Queen of Arabia, the sister fragrance from the same Pride line, King sits darker and more leather-forward. Browse the full Lattafa collection at Aromatica.
Available as an authentic decant in Bangladesh at Aromatica in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml.
Original: $425.00
-65%$425.00
$148.75Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
Bold, fruit-forward leather with unmistakable Arabian confidence: that is the personality Lattafa Pride built into King of Arabia Eau de Parfum, released in 2025 as part of the Pride line. It is a masculine fragrance that leans unisex in practice, built around a classic pairing of bright citrus and ripe raspberry up top, a floral-woody heart, and a leather-patchouli base that gives it real weight. Aromatica carries the Lattafa King of Arabia decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes.
Fragrance Notes
Top: Bergamot, Raspberry
Heart: Cedarwood, Osmanthus, Orris
Base: Leather, Patchouli, Vanilla
The Scent
Citrus and fruit open together rather than competing. Bergamot brings a clean, slightly bitter edge while raspberry adds sweetness without going candy-pink. It reads more like a fruity leather accord than a fruity floral, and that distinction matters. Within the first ten minutes, the raspberry starts pulling back and the heart notes begin pushing forward. Cedarwood arrives early and gives the composition a dry, woody spine. Orris follows, adding a cool, powdery iris quality that softens the wood without smothering it. Osmanthus is the quiet surprise here: it contributes a subtle apricot-floral quality that threads between the cedar and the orris, keeping the heart from going too austere. The interplay of osmanthus and orris in the mid-phase is what separates King of Arabia from blunter fruit-leather compositions. The leather appears faster than expected, sometimes bleeding through the heart before a full twenty minutes have passed. It is a firm, slightly smoky leather, not the soft suede variety. The raspberry does not vanish entirely at this stage; it lingers as a faint sweetness behind the leather, pulling it away from austerity. That residual raspberry also softens the transition between the woody heart and the heavier base materials, creating a bridge that keeps the composition from feeling abrupt. As the first hour closes, patchouli grounds the leather in dark, earthy richness, and vanilla begins to warm the whole composition from underneath. The vanilla here is not overtly sweet; it functions more as a softening agent, rounding the patchouli's earth and the leather's smoke into something cohesive and wearable. The dry-down is where King of Arabia earns its name: warm leather, patchouli, vanilla, with the orris still faintly present as a powdery trail. The osmanthus, barely perceptible at this late stage, leaves a ghost of stone-fruit warmth that keeps the base from reading as purely dark. It can read assertive and room-dominant or as a tighter, skin-close wear depending on skin chemistry. The Tom Ford Black Orchid and Oud Wood leather family gets mentioned in comparisons, though King of Arabia is clearly less smoky and considerably more fruit-forward than either.
When to Wear
King of Arabia is built for cooler weather, from autumn evenings to winter nights, where the leather and patchouli can breathe fully without turning heavy. It suits evening occasions with presence: a formal dinner, a date, or any event where a bold, confident scent is the right call. Browse the Arabians collection if you want to compare it against other richly-composed Middle Eastern fragrances.
Who Is It For
The leather lover who wants some sweetness to balance the darkness will find King of Arabia a natural fit, as will anyone who enjoys orientals and ouds but prefers fruit-leather hybrids over straight smoky compositions.
If you enjoy Queen of Arabia, the sister fragrance from the same Pride line, King sits darker and more leather-forward. Browse the full Lattafa collection at Aromatica.
Available as an authentic decant in Bangladesh at Aromatica in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml.











