The Story
Why it exists.
Zanzibar. An island at the crossroads of trade routes and tides, where the air carries spice, sea salt, and centuries of exchange. Lattafa named this 2024 release for that geography, not as a literal translation, but as a mood. The island's position between Africa and Arabia gave it a hybrid character: tropical heat wrapped in something more complex, more layered. Fanny Bal built the fragrance to capture that duality, bright openings that cool into something richer, warm skin that remembers where it's been.
If this were a song
Community picks
Red Red Wine
UB40
The Beginning
Zanzibar. An island at the crossroads of trade routes and tides, where the air carries spice, sea salt, and centuries of exchange. Lattafa named this 2024 release for that geography, not as a literal translation, but as a mood. The island's position between Africa and Arabia gave it a hybrid character: tropical heat wrapped in something more complex, more layered. Fanny Bal built the fragrance to capture that duality, bright openings that cool into something richer, warm skin that remembers where it's been.
The unusual heart is what sets this apart. Coconut water and iris don't typically share space, one reads tropical and almost lactonic, the other powdery and floral with a root-like earthiness. The salt bridges them, keeping the coconut from reading too sweet while giving the iris something to anchor against. It's a combination that shouldn't work as well as it does, though whether it works at all depends heavily on your skin chemistry and what you expect from a tropical fragrance.
The Evolution
The opening hits hard and fast. Lavender and black pepper arrive together, the pepper particularly assertive in the first fifteen minutes, enough that some wearers describe it as harsh or synthetic before it settles. By the half-hour mark, the coconut water emerges, softening the edges. The iris follows shortly after, bringing the powdery violet-like quality that defines the heart. This phase lasts the longest, two to three hours of tropical-powdery warmth. The drydown is where vanilla and incense take over, adding sweetness and a quiet smoky warmth that stays close to the skin for hours after. On some skin types, the coconut lingers underneath everything, adding a creamy undertone that reviewers either love or find too much.
Cultural Impact
Asad Zanzibar arrived in 2024 as Lattafa's most unexpected release in years, threading together East African coastal imagery with an olfactive identity that defies easy categorization. While the house built its reputation on bold oud-and-amber compositions that perform consistently across Middle Eastern markets, this fragrance stepped sideways into territory typically occupied by niche indie houses: lactonic coconut water paired with powdery iris and maritime salt. The combination proved immediately polarizing, dividing the fragrance community between those who find the coconut-iris heart genuinely brilliant and those who consider it a synthetic misstep.
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 slow burn afternoon, lavender sharp, pepper prickle, the air warming. Then the shift: coconut and salt and iris, something powdery and tropical settling in. By the drydown, it's late-evening warmth, vanilla smoke, the kind of moment that asks you to slow down. The dissonance is the point, aggressive opener, soft heart, quiet finish.
Red Red Wine
UB40























