
What unfolded around the “Snowed In” candle became less about one product and more about what happens when powerful brands fail to see what others cannot un-see. Designers may have intended nothing more than a childlike craft motif, but intention doesn’t erase impact. For many viewers, the resemblance to Ku Klux Klan hoods was instant, visceral, and anchored in generational trauma. Once that connection surfaced, a cozy seasonal object could no longer be neutral; it carried the weight of everything it accidentally echoed.
Bath & Body Works’ swift recall and apology showed a company scrambling to repair trust, even as resellers turned the controversy into profit. The deeper lesson lingers long after the candles are gone: in a visually saturated world, corporations don’t just sell images—they legitimize them. Diverse teams, slower approvals, and true cultural literacy are no longer “nice-to-haves.” They are the thin line between delight and damage, between a winter decoration and a reminder of terror.