
Leen
Leen carries a name that means gentle or tender in Arabic, and Lattafa built the fragrance to match, an Eau de Parfum released in 2023 that treats floral oriental territory with a soft, spiced hand rather than a heavy one. It opens on ginger and turmeric, an unusual pairing that signals this is not a straightforward sweet floral before jasmine and tuberose even arrive. Aromatica carries the Leen decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes, and it is worth trying before assuming it behaves like the brand's louder releases.
Fragrance Notes
Top: Ginger, Turmeric, Bergamot, Pink Pepper
Heart: Jasmine, Mango, Tuberose, Black Pepper, Osmanthus
Base: Musk, Sandalwood, Incense
The Scent
Ginger and turmeric hit first, warm and slightly earthy, with pink pepper adding a dry rattle on top. Bergamot cuts through that spice cluster, keeping the opening from turning heavy before the florals even show up. Within the first twenty minutes, jasmine starts to build underneath the spice, and it is a fuller, creamier jasmine than the sharp indolic kind, softened by a streak of mango that reads more like ripe fruit skin than dessert. Tuberose joins next and this is where the fragrance splits opinion: on some skin it stays waxy and green, on others it leans fully into its heady, narcotic side. Osmanthus threads through the heart quietly, contributing an apricot-leather nuance that most people register only as "something fruity but not sweet." Black pepper keeps reappearing every so often, a small spike that stops the florals from going flat. As the second hour passes, the spice recedes and musk starts to take over, turning the whole composition softer and closer to the skin. Sandalwood arrives late and creamy, smoothing out the transition, while a thin trail of incense gives the drydown a faint smoky edge instead of a purely sweet finish. The dry-down settles into a musky, woody base with jasmine and osmanthus still faintly audible underneath, calm and warm rather than loud. The handoff between jasmine and tuberose is gradual rather than abrupt, so the two florals overlap for a while before tuberose takes the lead. Mango stays present as a background hum through this stretch, keeping the jasmine from turning too heavy even as tuberose thickens the middle of the scent. Pink pepper from the opening occasionally resurfaces alongside black pepper, a faint echo of the spice that keeps the florals from feeling one-note. Once musk and sandalwood settle in, osmanthus continues to lend that fruity-leather quality, giving the base a bit more character than plain woods and musk would on their own. Incense stays subdued rather than prominent, more of a low shadow behind the sandalwood than a note that competes with it.
When to Wear
This suits transitional weather, cool evenings in early winter or mild autumn nights, when a spiced floral does not feel out of place. It reads well for dinner out, a gathering at someone's home, or any setting with soft lighting where the musk and incense drydown can sit close to the skin. Pair it with pieces from the full Lattafa collection if you want to build out a rotation around similar spiced orientals.
Who Is It For
Someone who likes their florals with a spiced, slightly smoky undertone rather than straightforward sweetness will get along with this. It also works for anyone who enjoys tuberose and jasmine but wants them dialed back by ginger and musk instead of pushed to the front.
If you enjoy Ana Abiyedh, its jasmine-and-musk backbone sits close to Leen's drydown, and Angham offers a similarly soft, spiced floral character worth comparing. Browse the full Lattafa collection at Aromatica.
Available as an authentic decant in Bangladesh at Aromatica in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml.
Original: $390.00
-65%$390.00
$136.50Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
Leen carries a name that means gentle or tender in Arabic, and Lattafa built the fragrance to match, an Eau de Parfum released in 2023 that treats floral oriental territory with a soft, spiced hand rather than a heavy one. It opens on ginger and turmeric, an unusual pairing that signals this is not a straightforward sweet floral before jasmine and tuberose even arrive. Aromatica carries the Leen decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes, and it is worth trying before assuming it behaves like the brand's louder releases.
Fragrance Notes
Top: Ginger, Turmeric, Bergamot, Pink Pepper
Heart: Jasmine, Mango, Tuberose, Black Pepper, Osmanthus
Base: Musk, Sandalwood, Incense
The Scent
Ginger and turmeric hit first, warm and slightly earthy, with pink pepper adding a dry rattle on top. Bergamot cuts through that spice cluster, keeping the opening from turning heavy before the florals even show up. Within the first twenty minutes, jasmine starts to build underneath the spice, and it is a fuller, creamier jasmine than the sharp indolic kind, softened by a streak of mango that reads more like ripe fruit skin than dessert. Tuberose joins next and this is where the fragrance splits opinion: on some skin it stays waxy and green, on others it leans fully into its heady, narcotic side. Osmanthus threads through the heart quietly, contributing an apricot-leather nuance that most people register only as "something fruity but not sweet." Black pepper keeps reappearing every so often, a small spike that stops the florals from going flat. As the second hour passes, the spice recedes and musk starts to take over, turning the whole composition softer and closer to the skin. Sandalwood arrives late and creamy, smoothing out the transition, while a thin trail of incense gives the drydown a faint smoky edge instead of a purely sweet finish. The dry-down settles into a musky, woody base with jasmine and osmanthus still faintly audible underneath, calm and warm rather than loud. The handoff between jasmine and tuberose is gradual rather than abrupt, so the two florals overlap for a while before tuberose takes the lead. Mango stays present as a background hum through this stretch, keeping the jasmine from turning too heavy even as tuberose thickens the middle of the scent. Pink pepper from the opening occasionally resurfaces alongside black pepper, a faint echo of the spice that keeps the florals from feeling one-note. Once musk and sandalwood settle in, osmanthus continues to lend that fruity-leather quality, giving the base a bit more character than plain woods and musk would on their own. Incense stays subdued rather than prominent, more of a low shadow behind the sandalwood than a note that competes with it.
When to Wear
This suits transitional weather, cool evenings in early winter or mild autumn nights, when a spiced floral does not feel out of place. It reads well for dinner out, a gathering at someone's home, or any setting with soft lighting where the musk and incense drydown can sit close to the skin. Pair it with pieces from the full Lattafa collection if you want to build out a rotation around similar spiced orientals.
Who Is It For
Someone who likes their florals with a spiced, slightly smoky undertone rather than straightforward sweetness will get along with this. It also works for anyone who enjoys tuberose and jasmine but wants them dialed back by ginger and musk instead of pushed to the front.
If you enjoy Ana Abiyedh, its jasmine-and-musk backbone sits close to Leen's drydown, and Angham offers a similarly soft, spiced floral character worth comparing. Browse the full Lattafa collection at Aromatica.
Available as an authentic decant in Bangladesh at Aromatica in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml.











