I own the Day Three lineup, and Frost is one of the fresher and more versatile releases from the house. It opens crisp, clean, and icy, giving you that cooling effect without smelling like a typical blue fragrance. It comes across smooth and well blended without being overly sharp, harsh, or synthetic.
As it dries down, it becomes softer, airier, and slightly musky while still holding onto that chilled freshness. It is not overly sweet or heavy, which makes it an easy fragrance to wear during the spring and summer, especially in hotter weather.
The performance is solid. It gives you noticeable projection early on and then settles closer to the skin. I would not call it a beast-mode fragrance, but it performs well for the type of scent it is. To me, the quality and blending are more important than trying to make every fresh fragrance extremely loud.
I also think Frost is very good for layering because it does not overpower other fragrances. It works more like a cooling and freshening enhancer. You can layer it with citrus, woody, musky, marine, aquatic, or even lighter floral fragrances. It adds brightness, airiness, and an icy freshness while still allowing the other fragrance to remain the main scent.
What makes Frost especially useful is what it can do with heavier fragrances during the summer. If you have something dark, rich, and dense like Louis Vuitton Ombré Nomade, Halfeti, or another oud, amber, leather, or woody fragrance, Frost can take some of that heaviness away and make it feel more wearable in warmer weather.
It does not magically turn Ombré Nomade into a true summer fragrance, and I would still be careful with the number of sprays in extreme heat. What it does is add a cooler, cleaner, and airier layer around the darker fragrance. It can soften some of the density, brighten the opening, and make the overall scent feel less thick and overwhelming.
With something like Ombré Nomade, I would use Frost as the stronger base and then add only one or two sprays of Ombré Nomade. This lets you keep the oud, rose, smoke, and darker character, but Frost gives it more space and freshness. The result can work well during summer evenings, cooler summer days, or indoor situations where Ombré Nomade by itself might feel too heavy.
From my collection, I could also see Frost working well with Louis Vuitton Imagination, Ex Nihilo Blue Talisman, Le Labo Another 13, or Molecule 01. With those fresher fragrances, it makes them feel even cleaner, cooler, and more radiant. With heavier fragrances, it works almost like an air conditioner, cooling them down and making them easier to wear without completely changing their original character.
Overall, Frost stands out not because it tries to be the loudest or most complex fragrance, but because it consistently delivers where it matters. It is smooth, well blended, highly wearable, and incredibly adaptable. Whether you wear it on its own or use it to enhance other fragrances, it fills a very specific role that few scents execute this cleanly and effectively.
My score: 9 out of 10.