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Roses On Ice

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Roses On Ice

Perfumer Frank Voelkl built By Kilian Roses On Ice around a single, strange idea: what if a rose was served like a cocktail, over ice, with a pour of gin? Released in 2020 as part of The Liquors collection, this Eau de Parfum lands somewhere between a botanical bar cart and a formal rose soliflore, and it refuses to behave like either. Aromatica carries the Roses On Ice decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes. The concentration is EDP, and the name tells you exactly what you are in for: cold, botanical, and unmistakably floral.

Fragrance Notes

Top: Cucumber, Juniper Berries, Lime, Violet Leaf, Pink Pepper

Heart: Rose, Ozonic Notes

Base: Musk, Sandalwood, Ambroxan, Cedar

The Scent

Cucumber dominates first contact, and that is not a subtle observation. It is the loudest thing happening at the open, a cold, watery green note that reads almost edible. The juniper berries arrive immediately alongside it, dry and slightly bitter in the way good gin botanicals are, and the lime and pink pepper add a sharp citrus-spice edge that keeps the whole top accord from feeling soft. Violet leaf lends a green, slightly metallic quality underneath, the kind of note that smells like holding a fresh-cut stem. Together these top notes form a cohesive, chilled accord that feels more like a botanical spirit than a conventional perfume opening, each element reinforcing the cold-and-green impression rather than competing for attention.

Within ten to fifteen minutes, the rose heart starts to surface. It can read as a beautiful, fresh, unisex rose that avoids all the heaviness and dustiness typical of classic rose fragrances, or the transition can feel jarring, landing more like a floral room spray than the gin-rose accord the opening promises. The ozonic notes in the heart push it cooler and cleaner rather than lush or romantic, keeping the rose from ever feeling warm. It smells like rose petals floating in cold water, not a bouquet in a warm room.

What is interesting about this middle phase is how the juniper does not disappear entirely. It retreats rather than vanishes, sitting behind the rose as a dry, faintly resinous shadow that stops the heart from reading as a straightforward floral. The cucumber, too, lingers at the edges longer than most people expect, giving the rose a watery, cool-green quality that feels more like a garden in early morning than a perfumery rose absolute. The pink pepper fades more quickly, but it leaves the overall accord with a faint spice memory that keeps things interesting. The rose at this stage is genuinely unusual: not the velvety warmth of a classic soliflore, not the synthetic brightness of a floral fresh, but something cooler and more architectural, held in place by the botanical skeleton around it.

The dry-down is where most people find peace with it. Sandalwood and ambroxan soften the botanical sharpness without adding sweetness, and the cedar grounds the whole thing with a clean, slightly woody dryness. The musk is skin-close and clean, never soapy. The ambroxan here is not deployed as a loud skin-scent amplifier the way it is in some modern fragrances. Instead it adds a subtle warmth and a faint mineral quality that works well with the ozonic notes still present from the heart. By the late dry-down, Roses On Ice smells composed and cool: a slightly woody rose with a ghost of cucumber still drifting through it, botanical rather than floral in its final impression.

The cool, aquatic character of the top and heart means it reads lighter than its EDP concentration might suggest, and it can stay close to skin or fade more quickly depending on temperature and skin chemistry. That lightness is part of the point. This is not a fragrance trying to dominate a space. It is a fragrance trying to feel like something you would actually want to wear when it is warm outside and you do not want to smell like a traditional floral or a conventional fresh.

When to Wear

Roses On Ice is built for warm-weather wear, spring evenings and summer occasions where a classic floral would feel heavy. It works well at brunches, garden events, and any setting where the goal is fresh rather than bold, polished rather than intense.

Who Is It For

Someone who finds most rose fragrances too heavy or too old-fashioned will find this a compelling choice: modern and cool-toned, it reads as floral without announcing itself across a room.

If you enjoy Love, Don't Be Shy, the same house's range across contrasting moods is worth exploring. For a different take on the cool, aquatic rose territory, Rose Atlantic by D.S. & Durga sits in a similar fresh-floral space. Browse the full Kilian collection at Aromatica.

Available as an authentic decant in Bangladesh at Aromatica in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml.

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From $499.80

Original: $1,428.00

-65%
Roses On Ice

$1,428.00

$499.80

Product Information

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Description

Perfumer Frank Voelkl built By Kilian Roses On Ice around a single, strange idea: what if a rose was served like a cocktail, over ice, with a pour of gin? Released in 2020 as part of The Liquors collection, this Eau de Parfum lands somewhere between a botanical bar cart and a formal rose soliflore, and it refuses to behave like either. Aromatica carries the Roses On Ice decant in Bangladesh in all available sizes. The concentration is EDP, and the name tells you exactly what you are in for: cold, botanical, and unmistakably floral.

Fragrance Notes

Top: Cucumber, Juniper Berries, Lime, Violet Leaf, Pink Pepper

Heart: Rose, Ozonic Notes

Base: Musk, Sandalwood, Ambroxan, Cedar

The Scent

Cucumber dominates first contact, and that is not a subtle observation. It is the loudest thing happening at the open, a cold, watery green note that reads almost edible. The juniper berries arrive immediately alongside it, dry and slightly bitter in the way good gin botanicals are, and the lime and pink pepper add a sharp citrus-spice edge that keeps the whole top accord from feeling soft. Violet leaf lends a green, slightly metallic quality underneath, the kind of note that smells like holding a fresh-cut stem. Together these top notes form a cohesive, chilled accord that feels more like a botanical spirit than a conventional perfume opening, each element reinforcing the cold-and-green impression rather than competing for attention.

Within ten to fifteen minutes, the rose heart starts to surface. It can read as a beautiful, fresh, unisex rose that avoids all the heaviness and dustiness typical of classic rose fragrances, or the transition can feel jarring, landing more like a floral room spray than the gin-rose accord the opening promises. The ozonic notes in the heart push it cooler and cleaner rather than lush or romantic, keeping the rose from ever feeling warm. It smells like rose petals floating in cold water, not a bouquet in a warm room.

What is interesting about this middle phase is how the juniper does not disappear entirely. It retreats rather than vanishes, sitting behind the rose as a dry, faintly resinous shadow that stops the heart from reading as a straightforward floral. The cucumber, too, lingers at the edges longer than most people expect, giving the rose a watery, cool-green quality that feels more like a garden in early morning than a perfumery rose absolute. The pink pepper fades more quickly, but it leaves the overall accord with a faint spice memory that keeps things interesting. The rose at this stage is genuinely unusual: not the velvety warmth of a classic soliflore, not the synthetic brightness of a floral fresh, but something cooler and more architectural, held in place by the botanical skeleton around it.

The dry-down is where most people find peace with it. Sandalwood and ambroxan soften the botanical sharpness without adding sweetness, and the cedar grounds the whole thing with a clean, slightly woody dryness. The musk is skin-close and clean, never soapy. The ambroxan here is not deployed as a loud skin-scent amplifier the way it is in some modern fragrances. Instead it adds a subtle warmth and a faint mineral quality that works well with the ozonic notes still present from the heart. By the late dry-down, Roses On Ice smells composed and cool: a slightly woody rose with a ghost of cucumber still drifting through it, botanical rather than floral in its final impression.

The cool, aquatic character of the top and heart means it reads lighter than its EDP concentration might suggest, and it can stay close to skin or fade more quickly depending on temperature and skin chemistry. That lightness is part of the point. This is not a fragrance trying to dominate a space. It is a fragrance trying to feel like something you would actually want to wear when it is warm outside and you do not want to smell like a traditional floral or a conventional fresh.

When to Wear

Roses On Ice is built for warm-weather wear, spring evenings and summer occasions where a classic floral would feel heavy. It works well at brunches, garden events, and any setting where the goal is fresh rather than bold, polished rather than intense.

Who Is It For

Someone who finds most rose fragrances too heavy or too old-fashioned will find this a compelling choice: modern and cool-toned, it reads as floral without announcing itself across a room.

If you enjoy Love, Don't Be Shy, the same house's range across contrasting moods is worth exploring. For a different take on the cool, aquatic rose territory, Rose Atlantic by D.S. & Durga sits in a similar fresh-floral space. Browse the full Kilian collection at Aromatica.

Available as an authentic decant in Bangladesh at Aromatica in 3ml, 5ml, 9ml, and 15ml.

Roses On Ice | Aromatica