The Story
Why it exists.
In 2025, Parfums Dusita added Tonka Latte to its collection, a composition built around the idea of comfort without performance. Pissara Umavijani has described her work as an effort to translate emotional concepts into scent, and Tonka Latte arrives as an embodiment of that approach: not a fragrance meant to announce itself, but one designed to accompany. The name is direct, tonka, milk, vanilla, but the execution is more layered than the label suggests. Where many gourmand fragrances lean into spectacle, this one sits closer to skin, quieter by design.
If this were a song
Community picks
Sunflower
Rhye
The Beginning
In 2025, Parfums Dusita added Tonka Latte to its collection, a composition built around the idea of comfort without performance. Pissara Umavijani has described her work as an effort to translate emotional concepts into scent, and Tonka Latte arrives as an embodiment of that approach: not a fragrance meant to announce itself, but one designed to accompany. The name is direct, tonka, milk, vanilla, but the execution is more layered than the label suggests. Where many gourmand fragrances lean into spectacle, this one sits closer to skin, quieter by design.
The structure is built around contrast: the airy, dairy softness of the opening versus the deeper, almost edible weight of the heart. Milk and white chocolate create an immediate sense of warmth, but the caramel that accompanies them adds a slight edge, sweetness that doesn't dissolve into nothing. The honey-to-tonka combination in the heart is where the composition earns its complexity. Tonka bean brings the coumarin richness that gives the fragrance its signature warmth, while honey adds a density that some find polarizing and others find addictive. It's the difference between a fragrance that smells like coffee and one that smells like you've been drinking coffee, a subtle but meaningful distinction.
The Evolution
The opening hits immediately: warm milk, a touch of white chocolate, caramel sweetness that doesn't shout. For the first thirty minutes, it's creamy and accessible, the kind of scent someone might dismiss as simple before they realize it's still going four hours later. Then the honey arrives. It doesn't replace the sweetness so much as deepen it, adding a grainy, almost pollen-like weight that shifts the fragrance toward something more intentional. Tonka and almond hold the middle ground, creating a bridge between the airy opening and the warmer base. By hour three, the lactonic quality softens. Vanilla and benzoin take over, creating a skin-warm finish that feels less like perfume and more like warmth that's been absorbed. On fabric, this lingers into the next day. On skin, the drydown stays intimate, present for the wearer, barely detectable from across a table.
Cultural Impact
The milk-gourmand profile has become its own subcategory in recent years, with Tonka Latte entering a space that includes established references like Giardini di Toscana's Bianco Latte. Wearers describe it as the kind of scent that draws people closer rather than announcing itself, a quality that reads as either restraint or weakness depending on the nose. The honey note has emerged as the fragrance's most divisive element: some find it adds necessary depth, others find it dominant to the point of sharpness. Overall reception skews toward appreciation for its worn-close quality and the sense that it behaves like something more expensive than its profile suggests.
The House
France · Est. 2016
Parfums Dusita is an independent perfumery house based in Paris, founded in 2016 by Pissara Umavijani. The name derives from a Siamese concept describing paradise where the spirit finds pure delight. Pissara serves as both founder and perfumer, bringing Thai heritage into conversation with French classical training. The house has released multiple fragrance collections, including La Douceur de Siam (2017), Issara (2016), Erawan (2018), Melodie de L'Amour (2016), Anamcara (2021), La Rhapsodie Noire (2022), Rosarine (2023), Blue Danube x 7 Scents (2025), and Light of Bangkok (2026).
If this were a song
Community picks
Tonka Latte sounds like a late Sunday morning, warm light through curtains, nothing scheduled. The milk and honey give it a softness that never turns saccharine, while the tonka and benzoin add a slight weight, like wood furniture that's absorbed decades of quiet afternoons. This is the kind of soundtrack you'd put on repeat without thinking about it.
Sunflower
Rhye

































