The Story
Why it exists.
The beginning
Matcha Latte arrived in 2025 as Atralia's answer to a very specific craving, the comfort of a sweet, milky drink translated into something you can wear. The concept is simple: warmth without heaviness, sweetness without syrup. What makes it work is the aniseed flower. It slips in quietly, giving the vanilla and cotton milk something to lean against so the whole thing doesn't just read as dessert. Atralia has spent nearly three decades proving that longevity and luxury don't require a fortune, and this fragrance is that philosophy in a bottle, lasting longer than most people expect, priced so more people can try it.
The choice of cotton milk as a structural note is unusual. Most gourmand fragrances use cream, milk, or coconut, recognizable lactonic markers that read as safe. Cotton milk is softer, drier, almost powdery in its milkiness. It gives Matcha Latte its distinctive texture: the warmth of dairy without the richness that usually weighs a fragrance down. Combined with aniseed flower, more aromatic than licorice, more green than spicy, the composition achieves something unexpected in the gourmand space. It's sweet, but it has a whisper of something herbaceous that keeps it from being a sugar-bomb.
The evolution
The opening is immediate: vanilla blossom, clean and bright, backed by the quiet softness of cotton milk. The aniseed flower arrives within the first minute, not bold, but present, like the scent of anise seeds on a baker's hands. Within fifteen minutes, the composition shifts. Toffee begins to emerge from the heart, pushing the lactonic cream toward something richer, warmer. The sugar powder note takes over the sillage for the next couple of hours, this is when it projects most, a sweet but moderate cloud that doesn't announce itself so much as linger in a room after you've left it. By the third hour, the base arrives: bourbon vanilla and tonka bean weaving together into a warm, slightly powdery drydown. The musk keeps everything clean, stopping the sweetness from cloying. Six to eight hours in, there's still something warm and close to the skin, not a projection, but a presence. The next morning, faint traces of vanilla and tonka on fabric. Worth washing, or not.
Cultural impact
Matcha Latte joins a 27-scent catalog that speaks fluently to the wearer who values depth of character over spectacle. Gourmand fragrances occupy a crowded lane, but this one carves space through restraint, the aniseed flower note is unusual enough to catch attention, subtle enough not to alienate.





















