The Story
Why it exists.
Lattafa has built its identity around ornate, maximalist designs paired with rich compositions. The brand blends Arabian heritage with modern versatility, delivering genuine complexity in affordable flacons. Elaborate packaging catches the eye while the juice inside rewards repeat wearing. Fire On Ice follows that tradition, taking its name as its entire concept. There is no metaphorical backstory here, no invented place or narrative designed to sell the fragrance. The perfumer simply wanted to create something that embodied heat meeting its opposite, and the notes carry that idea through with literal precision. Cognac brings the fire, raspberry and rose petals bring the chill, and the drydown settles into warmth without losing the chill entirely.
If this were a song
Community picks
Summertime
George Gershwin
The Beginning
Lattafa has built its identity around ornate, maximalist designs paired with rich compositions. The brand blends Arabian heritage with modern versatility, delivering genuine complexity in affordable flacons. Elaborate packaging catches the eye while the juice inside rewards repeat wearing. Fire On Ice follows that tradition, taking its name as its entire concept. There is no metaphorical backstory here, no invented place or narrative designed to sell the fragrance. The perfumer simply wanted to create something that embodied heat meeting its opposite, and the notes carry that idea through with literal precision. Cognac brings the fire, raspberry and rose petals bring the chill, and the drydown settles into warmth without losing the chill entirely.
The note choices in Fire On Ice reflect a clear philosophy: contrast creates interest. Cognac and raspberry do not naturally belong together, yet the pairing works because both are unapologetically themselves. Cinnamon reinforces the warm side, while rose petals and moss temper the composition with cool and green nuances. The drydown notes of oak, myrrh, cedarwood, and ambroxan are chosen for their ability to support rather than overshadow, creating a base that feels solid without overwhelming the brightness that came before.
The Evolution
The arc of Fire On Ice moves from confrontation to harmony. In the opening, cognac and raspberry operate almost like opposing forces, the spirit warmth battling against frozen berry tartness. Cinnamon sits between them, not choosing a side but amplifying both. As the fragrance settles into its heart, the confrontation softens. Caramel and rose petals create something unexpectedly cohesive, sweetness meeting cool floral without either dominating. Moss adds a quiet earthiness that reminds you this composition has depth beneath its bright surface. The drydown is where the journey resolves, oak and cedarwood providing a structural backbone while myrrh and ambroxan finish with warmth that feels earned rather than imposed.
Cultural Impact
This fragrance occupies an interesting space: the boozy cognac note adds an edge, while the ice-fire contrast gives it a conceptual hook that makes it memorable. For fragrance enthusiasts exploring beyond mainstream releases, this offers something worth examining. The interplay of warm cognac with cooler floral and woody elements creates a tension that keeps the scent engaging. The sweet fruity notes draw the nose in, while the deeper oriental base rewards those who pay closer attention.
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
This fragrance sounds like a late-night jazz club. The smoky warmth of cognac, the intimate darkness of black raspberry, the way sweetness and cool restraint play against each other, all of it suggests a dimly lit room where someone plays something slow and deliberate. Not a dance floor. A conversation.
Summertime
George Gershwin
























