
Vintage Radio
Lattafa built its name on maximalist Arabian ouds, but Vintage Radio, released in 2023 under the Lattafa Pride line, plays a different game entirely. This is an eau de parfum built around dry herbs and old wood, the kind of composition that feels like it belongs to a record collection rather than a perfume counter. Aromatica carries the Vintage Radio decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes, and it has quietly become one of the most requested unisex picks in the Lattafa lineup for people tired of sweet, oud-heavy Gulf styles.
Fragrance Notes
Top: Lavender, Sage, Bergamot
Heart: Plum, Palo Santo, Black Pepper
Base: Sandalwood, Oud
The Scent
Bergamot opens things up first, bright and slightly bitter, before sage settles in beside it with a dusty, herbal edge that keeps the citrus from feeling sweet. Lavender threads through both, and it reads more like dried lavender in a linen drawer than the sharp, soapy version found in cheaper fougeres. Within the first twenty minutes, black pepper starts to needle through the top accord, giving the whole thing a faint warmth without turning spicy in an obvious way. Plum arrives next, and this is where the composition gets interesting: it is not a jammy, candied plum but a drier, almost woody fruit note that leans into the sage rather than sweetening it. Palo Santo is the surprise here. It brings a smoky, resinous quality that some noses pick up immediately and others miss entirely under the pepper, so expect a range depending on your skin chemistry and how warm the day is. As the fruit and smoke settle, sandalwood takes over the frame, creamy and soft, and it is genuinely well blended rather than the thin, synthetic sandalwood found in a lot of budget ouds. Oud shows up last and stays low, more of a dark, earthy undertone than a dominant note, which keeps the dry-down from tipping into heaviness. What is left after an hour or two is a composition that reads as dry, woody, and a little smoky, with the lavender and sage still faintly present underneath the sandalwood. It is a quieter, more contemplative fragrance than most of what Lattafa releases, and that restraint is exactly what makes it work.
When to Wear
This suits cooler weather best, think late autumn evenings or the mild stretch of a Dhaka winter when a dry, woody scent does not feel out of place. It works well for a quiet dinner, a bookstore visit, or any low-key gathering where you want something distinctive but not loud, and it fits comfortably into the rest of the Lattafa collection for anyone building out a rotation of house scents.
Who Is It For
Someone who prefers dry, herbal woods over sweet gourmands will find a lot to like here, especially if they already gravitate toward vintage or apothecary-style scents rather than anything overtly sugary. It also suits people who want a unisex fragrance that does not lean hard into either traditionally masculine or feminine territory.
If you enjoy the smoky depth here, Mohra sits in a related woody-oud space and is worth comparing, and Raw Human offers another modern, understated take on the Lattafa house style. Browse the full Lattafa collection at Aromatica.
Available as an authentic decant in Bangladesh at Aromatica in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml.
Original: $363.00
-65%$363.00
$127.05Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
Lattafa built its name on maximalist Arabian ouds, but Vintage Radio, released in 2023 under the Lattafa Pride line, plays a different game entirely. This is an eau de parfum built around dry herbs and old wood, the kind of composition that feels like it belongs to a record collection rather than a perfume counter. Aromatica carries the Vintage Radio decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes, and it has quietly become one of the most requested unisex picks in the Lattafa lineup for people tired of sweet, oud-heavy Gulf styles.
Fragrance Notes
Top: Lavender, Sage, Bergamot
Heart: Plum, Palo Santo, Black Pepper
Base: Sandalwood, Oud
The Scent
Bergamot opens things up first, bright and slightly bitter, before sage settles in beside it with a dusty, herbal edge that keeps the citrus from feeling sweet. Lavender threads through both, and it reads more like dried lavender in a linen drawer than the sharp, soapy version found in cheaper fougeres. Within the first twenty minutes, black pepper starts to needle through the top accord, giving the whole thing a faint warmth without turning spicy in an obvious way. Plum arrives next, and this is where the composition gets interesting: it is not a jammy, candied plum but a drier, almost woody fruit note that leans into the sage rather than sweetening it. Palo Santo is the surprise here. It brings a smoky, resinous quality that some noses pick up immediately and others miss entirely under the pepper, so expect a range depending on your skin chemistry and how warm the day is. As the fruit and smoke settle, sandalwood takes over the frame, creamy and soft, and it is genuinely well blended rather than the thin, synthetic sandalwood found in a lot of budget ouds. Oud shows up last and stays low, more of a dark, earthy undertone than a dominant note, which keeps the dry-down from tipping into heaviness. What is left after an hour or two is a composition that reads as dry, woody, and a little smoky, with the lavender and sage still faintly present underneath the sandalwood. It is a quieter, more contemplative fragrance than most of what Lattafa releases, and that restraint is exactly what makes it work.
When to Wear
This suits cooler weather best, think late autumn evenings or the mild stretch of a Dhaka winter when a dry, woody scent does not feel out of place. It works well for a quiet dinner, a bookstore visit, or any low-key gathering where you want something distinctive but not loud, and it fits comfortably into the rest of the Lattafa collection for anyone building out a rotation of house scents.
Who Is It For
Someone who prefers dry, herbal woods over sweet gourmands will find a lot to like here, especially if they already gravitate toward vintage or apothecary-style scents rather than anything overtly sugary. It also suits people who want a unisex fragrance that does not lean hard into either traditionally masculine or feminine territory.
If you enjoy the smoky depth here, Mohra sits in a related woody-oud space and is worth comparing, and Raw Human offers another modern, understated take on the Lattafa house style. Browse the full Lattafa collection at Aromatica.
Available as an authentic decant in Bangladesh at Aromatica in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml.











