English Pear & Freesia vs Wood Sage & Sea Salt
Side by side. Scored honestly.
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Side by side
Comparing the originals — price, breadth, listed-note depth.
Crisp, dewy pear dominates the opening — bright but not candy-sweet, more like biting into cold fruit than smelling a candle. Freesia and white rose lift the heart into a soft, clean floral that reads feminine without being heavy, while melon keeps the whole thing light and slightly aqueous. Patchouli and musk in the dry-down are genuinely subtle, adding just enough warmth to anchor what would otherwise float away entirely. Projection is polite; sillage stays close to the skin by hour two — a well-behaved fragrance that doesn't announce itself across a room. — Made for warm-weather days, office wear, or anyone who wants something easy, pretty, and quietly elegant.
Opens with a sharp, salted grapefruit that reads genuinely coastal rather than synthetic — the sea salt and red algae give it a cool, mineral edge that smells like actual shoreline air, not a beach candle. The sage grounds the heart with a dry, herbal bite that keeps it from going full aquatic cliché. Driftwood anchors the dry-down into something slightly earthy and smooth, with ambrette adding a faint musky warmth that holds it close to the skin. Projection is modest; sillage is a quiet trail — — Best worn spring through summer, on anyone who wants clean without smelling scrubbed.
How they overlap
English Pear & Freesia and Wood Sage & Sea Salt share no notes in common — these two fragrances target very different olfactory territory, and the comparison is a question of which direction you want to go rather than which version of the same accord.
The buying decision
Wood Sage & Sea Salt is the cheaper original at $150 compared to $160 for English Pear & Freesia — about 6% less. English Pear & Freesia covers 3 seasons (spring, summer, fall) — wider weather range than Wood Sage & Sea Salt, which leans spring/summer-only.
Recommendation
These two land in genuinely different scent territory — there's no "better" answer, just which direction you want to go. Read the scent descriptions above and pick the one that sounds like you'd want to smell.