The Story
Why it exists.
Asad arrived in 2021 as part of Lattafa's expanding collection of bold fragrances. The scent was crafted to deliver a powerful olfactory experience without the typical luxury markup. It opens with an assertive blend of black pepper and tobacco, creating an immediate impression of strength and presence. The inclusion of pineapple adds an unexpected tropical brightness that lifts the opening into something more complex. This combination sets the tone for a fragrance that manages to feel both commanding and unexpectedly fresh, offering a sensory experience that challenges expectations about what an affordable fragrance can deliver.
If this were a song
Community picks
Moombaton Henda
Shakira
The Beginning
Asad arrived in 2021 as part of Lattafa's expanding collection of bold fragrances. The scent was crafted to deliver a powerful olfactory experience without the typical luxury markup. It opens with an assertive blend of black pepper and tobacco, creating an immediate impression of strength and presence. The inclusion of pineapple adds an unexpected tropical brightness that lifts the opening into something more complex. This combination sets the tone for a fragrance that manages to feel both commanding and unexpectedly fresh, offering a sensory experience that challenges expectations about what an affordable fragrance can deliver.
What makes Asad work is the way it layers contradictions. The black pepper and tobacco open sharp and masculine, but the pineapple thread adds unexpected brightness, a tropical current running beneath the spice. Then the patchouli and coffee heart brings it down to earth, grounding the brightness in something darker, more complex. It's this tension between sharp and sweet, fresh and warm, that makes the fragrance feel like more than the sum of its notes. The iris adds a powdery softness to the middle, preventing it from becoming too heavy. By the time the vanilla and amber arrive in the base, the fragrance has gone through three distinct phases, each one earning its place.
The Evolution
The opening hits hard. Black pepper and tobacco arrive together, sharp and confident, with the pineapple adding a strange tropical sweetness that catches you off guard. The first thirty minutes are all assertion, this is not a quiet fragrance. Then the coffee and patchouli take over, shifting the energy from electric to warm. The sweetness of the pineapple recedes, replaced by something earthier, almost resinous. By hour two, the drydown begins its slow entrance. Vanilla and amber come in quietly, wrapping around the remaining spice like a blanket being pulled tight. The sillage moderates, it was aggressive early, now it's intimate, close. Lasts into the next morning on fabric. The benzoin and labdanum give it a resinous quality that outlasts everything else.
Cultural Impact
Asad built a following fast by delivering an intense, bold scent experience at an accessible price point. It's become a reference point in fragrance communities, noted for its strong projection and long-lasting drydown. Wearers describe it in terms similar to premium designer fragrances: bold presence, lasting power, and a complexity that suggests it cost considerably more than it actually did.
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 opening hits like a bass drop, black pepper, tobacco, that electric first minute. Then it smooths out. Think late-night city, amber streetlights, a car that's not yours but somehow fits perfectly. The drydown is the long exhale after everything settles. If this fragrance were a playlist, it would start loud and end intimate.
Moombaton Henda
Shakira






























