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Nasheet

4.29 de 5
561 votos

Acordes principales

Descripción

Nasheet by Lattafa Perfumes is an aromatic woody fragrance for men and women. Launched in 2023, this olfactory composition features a top note of guaiac wood, a heart of nutmeg, and a base of incense, cashmere, and sandalwood.

Resumen rápido

Cuándo llevarla (votos)

  • Invierno 33%
  • Primavera 22%
  • Verano 9.4%
  • Otoño 36%
  • Día 43%
  • Noche 57%

Notas clave

Comunidad

561 votos

  • Positivo 83%
  • Neutral 8.6%
  • Negativo 8.2%

Pirámide olfativa

Estructura completa de la fragancia: de la salida al fondo.

Salida 1 nota
Corazón 1 nota
Fondo 3 notas

Comunidad

Qué dicen los usuarios sobre propiedad, preferencia y mejor momento de uso.

Propiedad

¿La tienen, la tuvieron o la quieren?

Uso recomendado

Estación y momento del día con más votos.

Dónde comprar

Compara tiendas verificadas para Nasheet y elige según envío, precio o disponibilidad.

Amazon

Amazon

Envío rápido

Entrega rápida y política de devoluciones conocida.

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Características

Resumen de votos sobre longevidad, estela, género y percepción de precio.

Longevidad

Escasa

Débil

Moderada

Duradera

Muy duradera

Estela

Suave

Moderada

Pesada

Enorme

Género

Femenino

Unisex femenino

Unisex

Unisex masculino

Masculino

Precio

Extremadamente costoso

Ligeramente costoso

Precio moderado

Buen precio

Excelente precio

Reseñas

Experiencias reales de la comunidad sobre uso diario, rendimiento y estela.

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33 reseñas

Mostrando las más recientes primero.

  • I was eager to try this Ani dupe, but at first it smells like insecticide. Then it shifts to lemon tree leaves and ends in baby powder, but infinitely better than the start. As for vanilla, nothing.

  • Trying it again after a few days and it’s a marvel. Upon drying down, it becomes something incredible: like lemon zest with vanilla, smells like a little cake.

  • Lattafa Nasheet is a decent attempt at Nishane Ani, but there are levels. For the price, it smells good and lasts, but Nishane is in another world: their vanilla is spectacular and the citrus shines brighter. Ani dominates in opening, evolution, and dry down. If we were to rate them: Ani 11, Nasheet 8. Is it worth it? Yes, totally. It’s ideal if you don’t like sweets or can’t afford Ani. Wear it in cold weather, afternoon, or night; my wife and I love it. Scent: 9. Projection: 2 hours. Longevity: 6-8 hours. Recommended.

  • I bought Lattafa Nasheet blindly and have no regrets. The opening is spicy and citrusy with no alcohol burn. Within the first hour, I notice it moving toward a high-quality vanilla that reminds me of a lemon tartlet ready to eat: the aroma of unbaked custard with lemon and vanilla-infused pastry underneath. Rich scent, moderate projection, and high longevity. I’ve had it for three months and it improves with time.

  • This doesn’t last a whisper, projects nothing, and doesn’t please because obviously no one can smell it on you. Not recommended, unless you just want the bottle for your luxury collection.

  • Definitely haven’t grown on me yet. It smells like vanilla custard stuffed into an old, damp wooden chest. It’s one of those perfumes where it’s more pleasant to smell the trail than to be the suffering wearer.

  • I like it, but it leans more masculine and lasts about as long as a whisper. There are better Arab Ani dupes out now that are worth it, so don’t buy this—head to the Aromatix channel instead. Even in English, they teach you their top Arab Ani dupes.

  • What an exquisite fragrance! My first Lattafa, smells like sweet vanilla and nutmeg. It’s ultra similar to the Nishane Ani I tried firsthand. The comments about poor longevity seem odd to me; my wife wears it and I can easily smell it projecting for 8 hours. Highly recommended.

  • Got a weird batch; it starts super spicy then shifts to creamy vanilla, but the vanilla takes so long to kick in that the spice never gets to shine and everything fades way too soon. Don’t buy it blindly.

  • Polydistortion

    Beautiful bottle, beautiful perfume, it has a wonderful opening but it’s not lasting (depends on the person; in my case, it’s not), but in what it lasts… WOOW!

  • EISENJGO17

    Deliciously aromatic, perfect for dates because it’s not intrusive, yet it stays within your personal bubble, which is a bit small. It projects and leaves a trail for about 40 minutes, then becomes very intimate but you still detect it, and it becomes addictive. For me, it’s perfect for sleeping; very pleasant. On my skin, it lasts 8 to 10 hours. Scent: 10/10 Trail: 3/10 Projection: 3/10 Longevity: 8/10.

  • It seemed to me to be a weak, sugary vanilla perfume, very weak; so much so that you have to bring your nose close to the clothes to smell it from the start. It shares the amber touch in the Eternal Oud line, but it’s faint, weak, and somewhat like ‘Wafa’, which it doesn’t even come close to shadowing. It’s true that Wafa doesn’t feel as vanilla, but if you have to spend money on something good, with staying power and a blind buy that everyone likes: Wafa, without a doubt (it has no reviews on Fragrantica but is on YouTube and is supposed to be a dupe or in the style of Kyllian’s Black Phantom). Anyway, I’ll wait a couple of months for this Nasheet to mature or macerate, as the forums say, since some Arabic perfumes have already been discounted, reformulated, or lack proper maceration. March 20, 2024.

  • EISENJGO17

    A perfume with a delicious scent, perfect for dates because it’s not invasive, but it stays within your personal bubble, which is a bit small. It projects and leaves a trail for about 40 minutes, then becomes very personal but you always sense it, and it makes you addicted to its aroma; for me, it’s perfect for sleeping since it’s very pleasant. On my skin, it lasts between 8 and 10 hours. Scent: 10/10, Trail: 3/10, Projection: 3/10, Longevity: 8/10.

  • Daniipntr

    I bought the 100ml for 23€. It’s a sweet scent with a very noticeable incense and totally unisex. It’s well-balanced, but I don’t think it’s for everyone, as the opening comes off as a medicinal smell. Yes, it’s quite rare, but it smells very good. As for longevity and projection, I’d say they are moderate, but I’ll let it sit for a few months to see if it improves. It’s quite linear, the same scent from start to finish, and in the drydown it resembles Bentley For Men. At the price of 20-25€, it’s good, but for cold climates.

  • Valefloral1

    I own Nishane Ani (it’s not a scent you find around the corner). One day I went to the office, and a colleague smelled like Ani; I asked what they were wearing, and they said Nasheet. To me, they seem similar, but Ani is much more concentrated and feels sweeter. In conclusion, if you don’t have the money for Ani, the Arabic fragrance is a good option.

  • Lattafa Nasheet was a blind buy, and I have no regrets: the opening is spicy and citrusy, but tasteful and not alcohol-heavy. During the first hour, I feel it evolve to give way to a very high-quality vanilla that reminds me of a lemon tart about to be bitten into, sensing the aroma of the cream without browning, with the lemon and vanilla pastry underneath. Rich scent, moderate projection, and high longevity; I bought it three months ago, and it’s getting better with time.

  • Valefloral1

    I own Nishane Ani (it’s not a scent you’ll find around every corner). One day, I walked into my office and a colleague smelled like Ani. I asked what they were wearing, and they said Nasheet. To me, they’re similar, but Ani is much more concentrated and feels sweeter. Bottom line: if you can’t afford Ani, the Arabic option is a solid choice.

  • yankees686

    I let it macerate for several months, and although the opening still has that nasty metallic smell, once it dries it becomes quite rich: a sweet, sugary scent accompanied by woods and that feeling of lemon cream cake.

  • Tested side-by-side with Nishane Ani: Ani is a well-crafted perfume with a noble scent where you notice the vanilla combined with ginger and the citrus touch as separate layers. This Nasheet has the same scent but everything is mixed together, making it impossible to distinguish the parts. I won’t give percentages because it’s relative, but I’d say 90%. The difference isn’t just quality, although Nishane uses better ingredients; in Ani, the citrus touch is noticeable, while in Nasheet it isn’t. To tell them apart, I have to wear them on different arms. In Ani, as it dries, the vanilla stays the same, the ginger rises, and the woods deepen, getting closer to this Arabic fragrance. I doubt their listed notes unless that declared incense is very similar to Ani’s vanilla. They are very similar perfumes, ideal for evening wear, super versatile, but work better when dressed up. I don’t recommend them for enclosed spaces or offices, and obviously, never in heat. This isn’t an inspiration; it’s an open-book clone.

  • naso_en_ciernes

    Nasheet is linear and shares Ani’s heart and drydown, but unlike Ani, which evolves from a citrus opening, Nasheet maintains its essence from the first spray until it fades. It’s very similar except for that opening; for a low price, it lets you experience the original Nishane, which is much more expensive. It’s a good alternative to Fragrance World, which many claim is an exact copy; it seems they haven’t smelled Nishane well, because Nasheet smells like Ani but is darker, moving away from Ani’s vanilla and luminous drydown. This Lattafa inspiration is closer to Nishane and even performs better than Spectre Ghost.

  • I let it mature for a few weeks because the sillage was non-existent at first, and it improved significantly, as happens with almost all Arabic perfumes that need three to five weeks of waiting. It’s sweet, fresh, and unisex (on my skin, it leans feminine). The opening is very synthetic and improves as it dries; there’s a medicinal note that hits hard at first and fades afterward, which some may not like. Is it an Ani dupe? From a distance, it can pass as Nishane, but if you get close or know the real Ani, there’s an abyss in ingredient quality and projection. At Nishane, the notes cascade progressively, whereas at Nasheet, they all sound together at once. For the price (I paid $9 on sale), it’s a good addition for daily wear.

  • naso_en_ciernes

    Nasheet is linear, but it shares the heart and dry-down of Ani, evolving from citrus notes at the start—something Nasheet doesn’t do. They’re very similar (I tested them side by side), except Lattafa hits you with the Ani scent all at once and keeps it going until it fades. Decent performance and great value; this is a way to experience the original Nishane, which is much more expensive. A good alternative to Fragrance World, which many claim is an exact copy of Ani; it seems they haven’t smelled it properly because it smells like Ani but is darker, drifting away from Ani’s luminous, vanilla dry-down. This Lattafa inspiration is closer to Nishane and even outperforms Spectre Ghost. Cheers.

  • If you try it, do it on very cold days. I made the mistake of trying it on a temperate/hot day, and the metallic part was very sharp and ugly. Totally different experience when trying it in the cold, changed my perception for the better. 5/10

  • They offered me a sample and I tried it, it seems very linear, doesn’t evolve, and I smell it as soapy, although it doesn’t have a lemon note.

  • anamaestracorreo

    I don’t care about the similarity percentage to Ani. I love this scent. Yes, it’s linear, but I enjoy it. Unisex, cold weather. It lasts very well and it’s freshly opened. Excellent price. I don’t see any flaws.

  • If they’re made as they say, use it in fresh climates and preferably after maceration. I sprayed it straight out of the package at 32 degrees, a fatal mistake, I judged it poorly, suffocating and heavy, gave me a terrible headache. Today, after three months of maceration in cool and temperate weather, it’s completely different, more bearable, you notice the woods and spices at first, then it dries down and leaves that sweet, pleasant vanilla, crazy, definitely a winter jewel.

  • Cebobionic

    Terrible disappointment. I don’t know what Ani smells like, but I do know this smells like Bentley for Man Intense with significantly worse quality. I doubt anyone could tell the difference, honestly. I’m still trying to understand the hype around this fragrance.

  • Cebobionic

    Terrible disappointment. I don’t know how Ani smells, but this smells like Bentley for Man Intense with much worse quality. I doubt anyone can tell the difference, honestly. I don’t get the hype for this fragrance.

  • aromaadurazneroReseñasYT

    Smells like cyclamen flower: rubbery, ambered, rough, animalic but synthetic. A soap but with an exotic aroma.

  • The wood, nutmeg, and incense make it strong at first, but after two hours, it disappeared from my arm with just three sprays. It feels like it’s sticking to the skin. I don’t care if it’s linear or not, I don’t know what people say about similar ones, but the projection is soft for half an hour and then it fades to skin and dies quickly. Price in Chile: $14.

  • I’ve had this for months looking for an Ani dupe… At first, it seemed very synthetic and I didn’t like it… I let it macerate and it’s a beauty! It doesn’t list lemon or bergamot, but it smells like lemon feet with a delicious little vanilla…

  • If you like sweet scents, this is a hit. Several people told me it smells like Bimbo buttery cakes when dry, not a compliment, but it hits the spot. In short, a perfect sweet for temperate or cold climates.

  • Another failed note attempt by Fragrantica. Here are the real ones: top of bergamot, pink pepper, and cardamom; heart of jasmine, vanilla, and patchouli; base of benzoin, sandalwood, and vanilla. Nothing else.