
The Language Of Glaciers
Imaginary AuthorsEau de Parfum2024
Side by side


The Language Of Glaciers peaks in spring, while Snowy Owl belongs to winter. The side by side below shows where they overlap.
This match is a verified relationship from our fragrance graph. The score weighs each fragrance's notes, accords, mood, occasion, weather fit, gender, and performance — the same scale as the badges on every “reminds of” rail.
The essentials
| The Language Of Glaciers | Snowy Owl | |
|---|---|---|
| Concentration | Eau de Parfum | Eau de Parfum |
| Launched | 2024 | 2020 |
| Gender | Unisex | Unisex |
| Perfumer | Josh Meyer | Dawn Spencer Hurwitz |
| Best season | Spring | Winter |
Scent DNA
The Language Of Glaciers
Snowy Owl
Shared between both fragrances
The pyramid
Notes both fragrances share
Community taste
| The Language Of Glaciers | Snowy Owl | |
|---|---|---|
| Score | 3.5/5 | 3.5/5 |
| Longevity | 6-10 hours | 6-10 hours |
| Sillage | moderate | moderate |
No varnish
The Language Of Glaciers is structured like a short story that refuses to follow a conventional arc. With no distinct opening or drydown, you live inside the heart notes from the first spray.The Language Of Glaciers
This is not a safe blind buy. The ozonic Calone creates an almost aggressive coldness that some find bracing rather than beautiful. This makes it truly unique.Snowy Owl
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