// Fragrance · By Season · Humidity — L3 data
// Component prefix: FragranceBySeasonHumidity
// Visual skeleton matches the Dewy prototype. Vary copy, never layout.
// Topic: wearing fragrance in humid climates and seasons — projection amplification,
// which families perform, how to layer lighter. Not medical.

const FragranceBySeasonHumidityMeta = {
  type: "Fragrance in Humidity",
  parent: { title: "By Season", href: "/en/fragrance/by-season/" },
  grandparent: { title: "Fragrance", href: "/en/fragrance/" },
  totalCount: 108,
  hero: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1474625342403-e300f3f3b87e?w=1800&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop",
  heroAlt: "Editorial still life — fragrance bottle in lush, warm, tropical light",
  h1: "How to wear fragrance in humid conditions.",
  deck: "Moisture in the air changes the equation. The full library on projection in humid climates, which scent families perform, and how to build a lighter layer that still reads.",
  intro: "Humidity does not simply add wetness to the air — it changes how fragrance molecules travel through it. In dry heat, volatile top notes evaporate quickly and projecting at a distance is possible with the right formula. In humid heat, the moisture-laden air carries those same molecules further and holds them longer, which means a fragrance that was calibrated for dry conditions projects at multiples of its intended intensity. The practical result is familiar to anyone who has visited Southeast Asia, the American Gulf Coast, or a tropical climate in August: a fragrance you thought was restrained suddenly announces you from across a room. The correction is not to stop wearing fragrance — it is to choose the families, concentrations, and application strategies that were built for this specific variable. Humid conditions are their own fragrance design problem, and they have specific answers.",
  byline: "Edited by Nelly · Beauty & Style Director",
  meta: { count: 108, updated: "Updated 4 May 2026", reading: "Avg. 4 min per piece" },
};

const FragranceBySeasonHumiditySiblings = [
  { id: "summer",   title: "Summer",   n: "01", href: "/en/fragrance/by-season/summer/" },
  { id: "winter",   title: "Winter",   n: "02", href: "/en/fragrance/by-season/winter/" },
  { id: "spring",   title: "Spring",   n: "03", href: "/en/fragrance/by-season/spring/" },
  { id: "autumn",   title: "Autumn",   n: "04", href: "/en/fragrance/by-season/autumn/" },
  { id: "humidity", title: "Humidity", n: "05", cur: true,  href: "/en/fragrance/by-season/humidity/" },
];

const FragranceBySeasonHumidityQuickFacts = {
  defn: {
    h: "What humid air does to fragrance projection",
    body: "Air that contains high moisture acts as a carrier for fragrance molecules, allowing them to travel further from the skin surface than dry air does. The result is amplified projection — sometimes dramatically so. A 2-spray application of an EDP that projects a metre in dry conditions may project two or three metres in a hot, humid environment. Concentration becomes a more critical variable in humidity than it is in dry climates. An eau de toilette, applied in a single point, will perform comparably in humid conditions to what an EDP delivers in dry ones.",
  },
  myths: [
    { m: "You should not wear fragrance in humid climates.",
      t: "Projection amplification is a variable to manage, not a reason to avoid fragrance. The correct response is to choose lighter-projecting families and reduce concentration. Aquatic, citrus, and clean musk families are calibrated for exactly this environment." },
    { m: "Fragrance fades faster in humidity because of sweat.",
      t: "The reverse is often true. Humid air holds scent longer on skin. What changes is that perspiration can alter the character of a fragrance's dry-down — some notes read differently on damp skin. This is a formula question, not a longevity problem." },
    { m: "Light fragrance in humidity means no sillage.",
      t: "Humidity provides the sillage. A single spray of an EDT-concentration aquatic in high humidity projects further than two sprays of the same formula in an air-conditioned room. The environment is doing the amplification work." },
  ],
};

const FragranceBySeasonHumidityBeginnerPath = {
  h: "Start here, if humidity is defeating your fragrance.",
  deck: "Five pieces, in order. The physics and the practical choices for hot, wet conditions.",
  steps: [
    { n: "01", t: "What humid air does to fragrance projection",          time: "3 min", note: "Why moisture amplifies sillage and what that means for your application." },
    { n: "02", t: "Concentrations for humid climates — where to start",   time: "4 min", note: "Why EDT and lower is the correct register in high-humidity environments." },
    { n: "03", t: "Scent families that perform in humid heat",            time: "5 min", note: "Aquatic, citrus, and clean musk — the families built for this variable." },
    { n: "04", t: "Application in humidity — one point, not three",       time: "3 min", note: "Why technique matters as much as formula when air is amplifying." },
    { n: "05", t: "Layering in humidity without overloading",             time: "4 min", note: "How to build depth without exceeding the environment's amplification." },
  ],
};

const FragranceBySeasonHumidityTrending = [
  { rank: "01", t: "Why humid air amplifies your fragrance's projection", time: "4 min", auth: "Nelly", date: "May 1",  img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1474625342403-e300f3f3b87e?w=1100&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", reads: "9,804" },
  { rank: "02", t: "EDT in humidity — the concentration argument",        time: "3 min", auth: "Iris",  date: "Apr 26", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1508739773434-c26b3d09e071?w=1100&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", reads: "8,014" },
  { rank: "03", t: "Aquatic fragrances in humid climates — the guide",    time: "5 min", auth: "Nelly", date: "Apr 21", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1519710164239-da123dc03ef4?w=1100&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", reads: "6,780" },
  { rank: "04", t: "One application point in humidity — why it works",    time: "3 min", auth: "Nelly", date: "Apr 16", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1592945403244-b3fbafd7f539?w=1100&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", reads: "5,601" },
  { rank: "05", t: "Clean musks in tropical conditions",                  time: "4 min", auth: "Iris",  date: "Apr 11", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1541643600914-78b084683702?w=1100&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", reads: "4,488" },
];

const FragranceBySeasonHumidityFormatGuide = {
  h: "Concentration × humidity level",
  deck: "How to match fragrance concentration to ambient humidity. The aim is appropriate projection, not maximum projection.",
  formats: [
    { name: "Eau Fraîche / Cologne",  when: "High humidity (>75 RH), tropical climates, midday",   avoid: "Dry climates, winter, indoor air-con only",     note: "The lightest concentration class. Performs in humidity as EDT does in dry conditions. The correct starting point for genuinely humid environments.", verdict: "Tropical default" },
    { name: "Eau de Cologne (EDC)",   when: "Moderate-high humidity, warm days, active wear",       avoid: "Cold or dry climates",                           note: "Light, appropriate projection in humid conditions. More longevity than eau fraîche while remaining seasonally calibrated.",                    verdict: "Warm-humid daytime" },
    { name: "Eau de Toilette (EDT)",  when: "Moderate humidity, air-conditioned spaces",            avoid: "High humidity outdoors without reducing spray count", note: "Standard concentration that becomes powerful in humidity. One spray only in genuinely humid outdoor conditions.",                          verdict: "Edit your spray count" },
    { name: "Eau de Parfum (EDP)",    when: "Air-conditioned indoor environments only",             avoid: "Humid outdoor conditions entirely",               note: "EDP outdoors in high humidity will project aggressively. Reserve for indoor, controlled environments. One spray maximum.",               verdict: "Indoors only" },
    { name: "Parfum / Extrait",       when: "Dry climates, controlled indoor spaces",               avoid: "Any humidity above 60 RH outdoors",              note: "The highest concentration. In humidity it projects at levels that are rarely appropriate. Not a humid-climate formula.",                  verdict: "Not for humidity" },
    { name: "Solid Perfume",          when: "High humidity as a controlled application format",     avoid: "Expecting long-range projection",                 note: "Solid perfume limits how much product is applied in a single gesture. A useful format for controlling dosing in amplifying conditions.",  verdict: "Control tool" },
  ],
};

const FragranceBySeasonHumidityHowtos = [
  { t: "What humid air does to fragrance projection — the physics",    time: 3, tech: "Science",    auth: "Nelly", date: "May 1",  img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1474625342403-e300f3f3b87e?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Science",    pick: true },
  { t: "EDT in humid climates — why concentration drops make sense",   time: 4, tech: "Concentration", auth: "Iris", date: "Apr 27", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1508739773434-c26b3d09e071?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Concentration", pick: true },
  { t: "Aquatic fragrances in humid conditions — a practical guide",   time: 5, tech: "Family",     auth: "Nelly", date: "Apr 22", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1519710164239-da123dc03ef4?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Family",     pick: true },
  { t: "One application point — technique for humid environments",     time: 3, tech: "Technique",  auth: "Nelly", date: "Apr 17", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1592945403244-b3fbafd7f539?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Technique",  pick: true },
  { t: "Clean musks in tropical and humid conditions",                 time: 4, tech: "Family",     auth: "Iris",  date: "Apr 12", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1541643600914-78b084683702?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Family",     pick: true },
  { t: "Why your EDP is too much in humid summer cities",              time: 3, tech: "Science",    auth: "Nelly", date: "Apr 07", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1615634260167-c8cdede054de?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Science",    pick: false },
  { t: "Citrus in humidity — projection, longevity, and limits",       time: 4, tech: "Family",     auth: "Iris",  date: "Apr 02", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1590736704728-f4730bb30770?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Family",     pick: false },
  { t: "Perspiration and fragrance — how damp skin changes dry-down",  time: 5, tech: "Science",    auth: "Nelly", date: "Mar 28", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1474625342403-e300f3f3b87e?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Science",    pick: false },
  { t: "Solid perfume as a humidity-control format",                   time: 3, tech: "Concentration", auth: "Iris", date: "Mar 23", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1508739773434-c26b3d09e071?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Concentration", pick: false },
  { t: "Light floral in humidity — which ones hold their character",   time: 4, tech: "Family",     auth: "Nelly", date: "Mar 18", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1519710164239-da123dc03ef4?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Family",     pick: false },
  { t: "Layering in humid conditions — keeping it from compounding",   time: 4, tech: "Technique",  auth: "Iris",  date: "Mar 13", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1592945403244-b3fbafd7f539?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Technique",  pick: false },
  { t: "Fragrance for tropical climates — a regional perspective",     time: 5, tech: "Wardrobe",   auth: "Nelly", date: "Mar 08", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1541643600914-78b084683702?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Wardrobe",   pick: false },
  { t: "Humidity and base notes — how they read on damp skin",         time: 3, tech: "Science",    auth: "Iris",  date: "Mar 03", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1615634260167-c8cdede054de?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Science",    pick: false },
  { t: "How to build a two-fragrance humid-season wardrobe",           time: 4, tech: "Wardrobe",   auth: "Nelly", date: "Feb 26", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1590736704728-f4730bb30770?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Wardrobe",   pick: false },
  { t: "Synthetic musks in humidity — why they perform differently",   time: 3, tech: "Science",    auth: "Iris",  date: "Feb 21", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1474625342403-e300f3f3b87e?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Science",    pick: false },
  { t: "Hair misting in humidity — the argument for it",               time: 4, tech: "Technique",  auth: "Nelly", date: "Feb 16", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1508739773434-c26b3d09e071?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Technique",  pick: false },
  { t: "Monsoon season fragrance — how to think about it",             time: 5, tech: "Wardrobe",   auth: "Iris",  date: "Feb 11", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1519710164239-da123dc03ef4?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Wardrobe",   pick: false },
  { t: "Avoiding fragrance that reads as synthetic in humidity",       time: 3, tech: "Science",    auth: "Nelly", date: "Feb 06", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1592945403244-b3fbafd7f539?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Science",    pick: false },
  { t: "Green tea and bamboo accords in humid climates",               time: 4, tech: "Family",     auth: "Iris",  date: "Feb 01", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1541643600914-78b084683702?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Family",     pick: false },
  { t: "The eau fraîche — understanding the lightest concentration class", time: 3, tech: "Concentration", auth: "Nelly", date: "Jan 27", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1615634260167-c8cdede054de?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Concentration", pick: false },
];

const FragranceBySeasonHumidityTechFilters = ["All", "Science", "Family", "Concentration", "Technique", "Wardrobe"];

const FragranceBySeasonHumidityCrosslinks = [
  { id: "summer",   title: "Summer fragrance",   deck: "Dry heat. The amplification problem without moisture.",      count: 127, href: "/en/fragrance/by-season/summer/" },
  { id: "winter",   title: "Winter fragrance",   deck: "Cold air. Projection suppressed — different demands.",       count: 134, href: "/en/fragrance/by-season/winter/" },
  { id: "spring",   title: "Spring fragrance",   deck: "Transitional temperatures. Bloom-weather note behaviour.",   count: 119, href: "/en/fragrance/by-season/spring/" },
  { id: "autumn",   title: "Autumn fragrance",   deck: "Cooling and dry. The base note season.",                    count: 122, href: "/en/fragrance/by-season/autumn/" },
];

Object.assign(window, {
  FragranceBySeasonHumidityMeta,
  FragranceBySeasonHumiditySiblings,
  FragranceBySeasonHumidityQuickFacts,
  FragranceBySeasonHumidityBeginnerPath,
  FragranceBySeasonHumidityTrending,
  FragranceBySeasonHumidityFormatGuide,
  FragranceBySeasonHumidityHowtos,
  FragranceBySeasonHumidityTechFilters,
  FragranceBySeasonHumidityCrosslinks,
});
