Perfume Parlour 2023 Edp

U £

Spiced Harmony

Perfume Parlour Spiced Harmony is an Eau de Parfum launched in 2023. Spiced Harmony opens with Cinnamon, Cardamom, and Ginger, settles into a heart of Praline, Candied Fruits, and Floral, and dries down to a base of Coffee, Vanilla, Tonka Bean, and Benzoin. Perfume Parlour's Spiced Harmony carries a Statement verdict, a gourmand-led wear.

A budget take on Lattafa's Khamrah Qahwa. Spiced Harmony nails the cosy coffee-and-praline gourmand wrapped in cinnamon, cardamom and vanilla, and the scent itself reads close. The catch is performance: where the original is a long-lasting beast, this version is noticeably weaker, projecting softly and fading sooner.
  • Cozy
  • Comforting
  • Warm
  • Sensual
  • Grounded
Spiced Harmony Eau de Parfum bottle

ScentArt

Profile

Citrus Floral Fruity Green Sweet Warm Woody Earthy Animalic Fresh
Citrus 4%
Floral 8%
Fruity 5%
Green 2%
Sweet 45%
Warm 37%
Woody 3%
Earthy 7%
Animalic 4%
Fresh 6%

Mood Profile

Mood Energising
Calming
Character Playful
Serious
Sentiment Uplifting
Brooding

Performance

Longevity
Short (2-4h)
Projection
Intimate
Intensity
Moderate

Best Seasons

Best For:
Fall Winter

The warm spice, coffee and sweet vanilla gourmand make this a cold-weather scent for autumn and winter; far too heavy and sweet for warm months.

Best Occasions

Best For:
Casual
Also Works:
Date

Its cosy, sweet gourmand warmth suits casual days, snug evenings and warm dates; too sweet and informal for the office or sport.

Similar

Compare

Where to buy

Wide selection Amazon UK Prime delivery often available Check price on
also worth checking
Check price on

ScentVerdict earns a commission from purchases - this doesn't affect our verdicts.

About

Spiced Harmony chases the indulgent coffee gourmand of Lattafa's Khamrah Qahwa - the boozy, cardamom-spiked coffee flanker that became a budget-fragrance sensation. It opens warm and spicy with cinnamon, cardamom and a flick of ginger, then sweetens into a heart of nutty praline, candied fruits and a touch of white flowers. The base is the heart of the matter: a rich coffee accord poured over creamy vanilla, tonka and resinous benzoin, with musk rounding it out. On the scent profile alone it does a faithful job - the cosy coffee-and-spice character is all there. Where it falls short of the original is performance: Khamrah Qahwa is known to be strong and long-lasting, while wearers consistently report Spiced Harmony projecting more softly and fading faster, the gourmand richness reading a shade flatter. What you get is a genuinely comforting, snug coffee gourmand for cold weather - just don't expect the beast-mode longevity of the Lattafa. Best in autumn and winter, made for cosy evenings, casual days and warm dates.