The Story
Why it exists.
Art of Arabia I arrived as a statement of intent. The name says everything, not a single note or a private obsession, but an entire tradition made wearable. Lattafa has built its reputation on accessible ambition, taking the depth of Arabian perfumery and distilling it into something anyone can reach for. Art of Arabia I is the house operating at full confidence, no hedging, no apology. Bergamot and mint in the opening signal immediately that this is going to be bright and energetic rather than heavy and contemplative. Then the name's promise builds: Arabian perfumery means warmth, depth, resinous complexity, and it delivers all of that in the base notes that emerge once the citrus cools.
If this were a song
Community picks
Crystalised
The xx
The Beginning
Art of Arabia I arrived as a statement of intent. The name says everything, not a single note or a private obsession, but an entire tradition made wearable. Lattafa has built its reputation on accessible ambition, taking the depth of Arabian perfumery and distilling it into something anyone can reach for. Art of Arabia I is the house operating at full confidence, no hedging, no apology. Bergamot and mint in the opening signal immediately that this is going to be bright and energetic rather than heavy and contemplative. Then the name's promise builds: Arabian perfumery means warmth, depth, resinous complexity, and it delivers all of that in the base notes that emerge once the citrus cools.
What makes Art of Arabia I interesting isn't any single material, it's the structural ambition. The opening is clean, almost clinical in its sharpness, the kind of mint-bright freshness you'd expect from a summer fragrance. The heart then pivots hard to black tea, which is itself a statement: tea is warm, contemplative, slightly bitter, it belongs in an afternoon, not a morning rush. But there it is, center stage, carrying ginger's spice and lavender's herbal edge. This is a fragrance that refuses to sit still in one mood. Then the base arrives, and it arrives slowly, ambroxan, frankincense, cinnamon, three materials that could easily collapse into opulent sweetness but instead hold a kind of clean warmth.
The Evolution
The opening doesn't tease, it arrives fully formed. Bergamot and mint hit the skin with the kind of confidence that says: this is what you're getting, and it's good. The mint lingers for roughly the first thirty minutes, bright and almost medicinal in its clarity, before it begins to soften. Then the transition starts, and it's the interesting part. Black tea emerges not as a note you're aware of but as a feeling, something slightly bitter, slightly warm, drifting beneath the surface. Ginger and lavender carry the heart now, and they do it quietly. The sillage moderates around the two-hour mark. What you're wearing becomes something you sense more than smell, a warmth close to the skin, a faint amber quality that doesn't shout. Then the base arrives, and this is where opinions split. Ambroxan can read as clean, soapy, even detergent-adjacent on some skin. But underneath it, frankincense and cinnamon build slowly, resinous, warm, grounded.
Cultural Impact
Art of Arabia I occupies an interesting position in the budget fragrance landscape, it landed in 2023 and drew immediate comparisons to Louis Vuitton Imagination, a scent that retails at a fraction of the price. The comparison isn't flattering in every direction: where Imagination is smooth and polished in its transitions, Art of Arabia I can feel more abrupt, with a mint opening that reads as sharper and a base that leans soap-clean rather than luxurious. But the comparison itself is the compliment. To be mentioned in the same sentence as a high-end house fragrance, even as an alternative, is significant positioning for a fragrance at this price point.
The House
United Arab Emirates · Est. 1980
Lattafa Perfumes is the United Arab Emirates powerhouse that turned the fragrance world on its head. They offer a taste of Arabian luxury and high-end scent profiles without the exclusive price tag, making them a gateway for many into the world of perfumery.
If this were a song
Community picks
The scent moves between crisp morning alertness and quiet afternoon warmth. The mint opening suggests a sonic profile that begins cool and electronic, then softens into something more organic, the warmth of black tea, the slight bitterness that makes you lean in closer. The frankincense drydown brings a cinematic weight, something like the score to a film set in a city at golden hour. This is music that knows when to be present and when to recede, mirroring the fragrance's own transition from bold opening to intimate close.
Crystalised
The xx























