// Fragrance · Scent Families · Citrus — L3 data

const FragranceScentFamiliesCitrusData = {
  type: "Citrus",
  parent: { title: "Scent Families", href: "/en/fragrance/scent-families/" },
  grandparent: { title: "Fragrance", href: "/en/fragrance/" },
  totalCount: 112,
  hero: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1587316205272-e9bdf36df06e?w=1800&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop",
  heroAlt: "Editorial close-up — citrus fruits sliced, bright natural light",
  h1: "How to wear citrus fragrance.",
  deck: "From bergamot colognes to bitter neroli. The full library on citrus notes, longevity strategies, and when brightness is exactly the right call.",
  intro: "Citrus is the most immediate family in perfumery and the most technically difficult to make last. The molecules that produce the bright, sharp, zesty quality — limonene, citral, linalool — are volatile by nature. They evaporate fast. What you smell in the first five minutes of a citrus fragrance is rarely what the perfumer considers the heart of the composition. The opening is a delivery mechanism. The real question is what sits underneath: the woody base that holds citrus notes in place, the musk that anchors the lemon, the vetiver that makes bergamot feel like more than a top note. Modern citrus fragrances solve the longevity problem in several ways — aromatic co-notes, synthetic replacements for unstable naturals, high concentration. Below is everything we've published on how citrus notes behave, which formats last longest, and how skin chemistry changes the citrus reading.",
  byline: "Edited by Nelly · Beauty & Style Director",
  meta: { count: 112, updated: "Updated 2 May 2026", reading: "Avg. 4 min per piece" },
};

const FragranceScentFamiliesCitrussiblings = [
  { id: "floral",      title: "Floral",        n: "01", href: "/en/fragrance/scent-families/floral/" },
  { id: "citrus",      title: "Citrus",        n: "02", cur: true,  href: "/en/fragrance/scent-families/citrus/" },
  { id: "woody",       title: "Woody",         n: "03", href: "/en/fragrance/scent-families/woody/" },
  { id: "amber",       title: "Amber",         n: "04", href: "/en/fragrance/scent-families/amber/" },
  { id: "green-musks", title: "Green & Musk",  n: "05", href: "/en/fragrance/scent-families/green-musks/" },
];

const FragranceScentFamiliesCitrusQuickFacts = {
  defn: {
    h: "What the citrus family actually contains",
    body: "Citrus in fragrance covers all scents where zesty, acidic, or tart fruit rind notes dominate: lemon, bergamot, grapefruit, lime, mandarin, yuzu, neroli (distilled orange blossom), and petitgrain (distilled orange leaf). Most citrus notes used in perfumery are synthetic reconstructions — the real essential oils oxidise and lose their character within months. Bergamot is the most widely used citrus material in fine fragrance, present in thousands of compositions as both a top note and a structural element.",
  },
  myths: [
    { m: "Citrus fragrances don't last.",
      t: "Top notes don't last. A well-built citrus fragrance has a woody, musky, or aromatic base that carries the composition for hours. The citrus opening is intentionally brief — what matters is what's under it." },
    { m: "Citrus is a summer-only family.",
      t: "Bergamot colognes and yuzu-based eau de parfums wear comfortably year-round. The freshness reads differently in cold weather — more of a clean contrast than a cooling sensation." },
    { m: "Grapefruit and lemon smell the same in fragrance.",
      t: "Lemon reads bright, clean, and slightly sharp. Grapefruit has a distinct bitter, slightly green quality. Yuzu adds a floral facet none of the European citruses have. These are technically and experientially distinct materials." },
  ],
};

const FragranceScentFamiliesCitrusBeginnerPath = {
  h: "Start here, if citrus fragrance is new to you.",
  deck: "Five pieces, in order. About seventeen minutes of reading. Enough to understand why some citrus fragrances last ten minutes and others last all day.",
  steps: [
    { n: "01", t: "Why citrus notes fade — the volatility problem",            time: "3 min", note: "The chemistry of why the bright opening disappears and what the base does instead." },
    { n: "02", t: "Bergamot — the most common citrus note in fine fragrance",  time: "4 min", note: "Where it comes from, what it smells like, and why it's in so many compositions." },
    { n: "03", t: "Eau de cologne concentration — why the classic format works", time: "3 min", note: "The traditional citrus vehicle and how to wear it correctly." },
    { n: "04", t: "Citrus vs aromatic citrus — the two different directions",   time: "4 min", note: "Straight citrus versus citrus blended with herbs. How the character changes." },
    { n: "05", t: "How to make citrus fragrance last — application strategies", time: "3 min", note: "Layering, reapplication, and skin preparation for volatile notes." },
  ],
};

const FragranceScentFamiliesCitrusTrending = [
  { rank: "01", t: "Bergamot in fragrance — far more than a top note",              time: "4 min", auth: "Nelly", date: "Apr 28", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1587316205272-e9bdf36df06e?w=1100&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", reads: "9,340" },
  { rank: "02", t: "Yuzu vs lemon — what makes yuzu worth the price",              time: "3 min", auth: "Iris",  date: "Apr 23", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1523294587484-bae6cc870010?w=1100&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", reads: "7,821" },
  { rank: "03", t: "How to make a citrus fragrance last past the first hour",      time: "4 min", auth: "Nelly", date: "Apr 18", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1587316205272-e9bdf36df06e?w=1100&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", reads: "6,203" },
  { rank: "04", t: "Grapefruit in fragrance — the bitter, green alternative",      time: "3 min", auth: "Iris",  date: "Apr 13", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1523294587484-bae6cc870010?w=1100&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", reads: "5,117" },
  { rank: "05", t: "Cologne vs EdT — the concentration question for citrus",       time: "3 min", auth: "Nelly", date: "Apr 08", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1587316205272-e9bdf36df06e?w=1100&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", reads: "4,288" },
];

const FragranceScentFamiliesCitrusFormatGuide = {
  h: "Citrus note type, by longevity and occasion",
  deck: "Not all citrus behaves the same. These are note categories and base pairings — not specific products.",
  formats: [
    { name: "Bergamot (pure)",        when: "Formal settings, morning wear, year-round",              avoid: "When longevity is the primary requirement",          note: "The most elegant citrus note. Fades within 30–45 minutes as a top note.", verdict: "Opening tool" },
    { name: "Bergamot (EdP base)",    when: "All-day wear with citrus character",                     avoid: "If you want a very clean, cool citrus effect",        note: "When bergamot is loaded into an EdP concentration it behaves differently — longer, warmer.", verdict: "Longevity solution" },
    { name: "Lemon (sharp)",          when: "Hot weather, morning, fresh-context wear",               avoid: "Evening and intimate settings — it reads hygienic",    note: "The sharpest citrus. Most likely to read as cleaner/soap on warm skin.",   verdict: "Daytime only" },
    { name: "Grapefruit (bitter)",    when: "Sporty, casual, daytime contexts",                       avoid: "Rich oriental or heavy floral layering",              note: "Distinctive bitter edge that doesn't pair well with sweet or heavy bases.", verdict: "Standalone" },
    { name: "Yuzu",                   when: "When you want citrus with a floral facet",               avoid: "If pairing with other florals — redundancy",          note: "More complex than European citruses. A floral, slightly tart quality.",    verdict: "Elevated pick" },
    { name: "Neroli",                 when: "Year-round, transition between citrus and floral needs", avoid: "Heavy base note pairings — neroli is delicate",       note: "Distilled orange blossom. Softer and more honeyed than the other citruses.", verdict: "Bridge note" },
  ],
};

const FragranceScentFamiliesCitrusHowtos = [
  { t: "Bergamot in fragrance — far more than a top note",                          time: 4, tech: "Notes",       auth: "Nelly", date: "Apr 28", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1587316205272-e9bdf36df06e?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Notes",       pick: true },
  { t: "Yuzu vs lemon — what makes yuzu worth the price",                           time: 3, tech: "Notes",       auth: "Iris",  date: "Apr 23", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1523294587484-bae6cc870010?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Notes",       pick: true },
  { t: "How to make a citrus fragrance last past the first hour",                   time: 4, tech: "Application", auth: "Nelly", date: "Apr 18", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1587316205272-e9bdf36df06e?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Application", pick: true },
  { t: "Grapefruit in fragrance — the bitter, green alternative",                   time: 3, tech: "Notes",       auth: "Iris",  date: "Apr 13", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1523294587484-bae6cc870010?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Notes",       pick: true },
  { t: "Cologne vs EdT — the concentration question for citrus",                    time: 3, tech: "Concentration", auth: "Nelly", date: "Apr 08", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1587316205272-e9bdf36df06e?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Concentration", pick: true },
  { t: "Why citrus top notes evaporate — the chemistry of volatility",             time: 3, tech: "Chemistry",   auth: "Nelly", date: "Apr 03", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1523294587484-bae6cc870010?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Chemistry",   pick: false },
  { t: "Mandarin vs tangerine in fragrance — the sweeter citruses",                time: 3, tech: "Notes",       auth: "Iris",  date: "Mar 29", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1587316205272-e9bdf36df06e?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Notes",       pick: false },
  { t: "Petitgrain — citrus without the fruit",                                    time: 4, tech: "Notes",       auth: "Nelly", date: "Mar 24", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1523294587484-bae6cc870010?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Notes",       pick: false },
  { t: "Citrus and wood — the base that makes brightness last",                    time: 4, tech: "Structure",   auth: "Nelly", date: "Mar 19", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1587316205272-e9bdf36df06e?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Structure",   pick: false },
  { t: "Citrus fragrance in cold weather — how it reads differently",              time: 3, tech: "Season",      auth: "Iris",  date: "Mar 14", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1523294587484-bae6cc870010?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Season",      pick: false },
  { t: "Eau de cologne — the format built for citrus",                             time: 4, tech: "Concentration", auth: "Nelly", date: "Mar 09", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1587316205272-e9bdf36df06e?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Concentration", pick: false },
  { t: "Citrus and skin type — why oily skin extends the citrus phase",            time: 3, tech: "Skin",        auth: "Iris",  date: "Mar 04", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1523294587484-bae6cc870010?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Skin",        pick: false },
  { t: "Aromatic citrus — bergamot with herbs and the fougère tradition",          time: 5, tech: "Essay",       auth: "Nelly", date: "Feb 27", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1587316205272-e9bdf36df06e?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Essay",       pick: false },
  { t: "Layering a citrus fragrance — what sits underneath and why",               time: 4, tech: "Layering",    auth: "Nelly", date: "Feb 22", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1523294587484-bae6cc870010?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Layering",    pick: false },
  { t: "Neroli vs orange blossom — why they smell so different",                   time: 4, tech: "Notes",       auth: "Iris",  date: "Feb 17", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1587316205272-e9bdf36df06e?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Notes",       pick: false },
  { t: "Reapplication strategy for colognes — how professionals do it",            time: 3, tech: "Application", auth: "Nelly", date: "Feb 12", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1523294587484-bae6cc870010?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Application", pick: false },
  { t: "Citrus and musk — the combination that extends wear",                      time: 3, tech: "Structure",   auth: "Iris",  date: "Feb 07", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1587316205272-e9bdf36df06e?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Structure",   pick: false },
  { t: "The synthetic citrus note — why naturals are often replaced",              time: 4, tech: "Chemistry",   auth: "Nelly", date: "Feb 02", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1523294587484-bae6cc870010?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Chemistry",   pick: false },
  { t: "Citrus for professional environments — projection and discretion",         time: 3, tech: "Application", auth: "Iris",  date: "Jan 27", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1587316205272-e9bdf36df06e?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Application", pick: false },
  { t: "Iso E Super and citrus — the synthetic that extends orange notes",         time: 4, tech: "Chemistry",   auth: "Nelly", date: "Jan 22", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1523294587484-bae6cc870010?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Chemistry",   pick: false },
];

const FragranceScentFamiliesCitrusTechFilters = ["All", "Notes", "Application", "Concentration", "Structure", "Season", "Skin", "Chemistry", "Layering", "Essay"];

const FragranceScentFamiliesCitrusCrosslinks = [
  { id: "floral",      title: "Floral",       deck: "Rose, jasmine, tuberose. The flower-forward family.",      count: 138, href: "/en/fragrance/scent-families/floral/" },
  { id: "woody",       title: "Woody",        deck: "Cedar, sandalwood, vetiver. The structural base notes.",   count: 124, href: "/en/fragrance/scent-families/woody/" },
  { id: "amber",       title: "Amber",        deck: "Warm, resinous, enveloping. The deep oriental family.",    count: 119, href: "/en/fragrance/scent-families/amber/" },
  { id: "green-musks", title: "Green & Musk", deck: "Clean, diffuse, close to skin. The quiet family.",        count: 98,  href: "/en/fragrance/scent-families/green-musks/" },
];

Object.assign(window, {
  FragranceScentFamiliesCitrusData,
  FragranceScentFamiliesCitrussiblings,
  FragranceScentFamiliesCitrusQuickFacts,
  FragranceScentFamiliesCitrusBeginnerPath,
  FragranceScentFamiliesCitrusTrending,
  FragranceScentFamiliesCitrusFormatGuide,
  FragranceScentFamiliesCitrusHowtos,
  FragranceScentFamiliesCitrusTechFilters,
  FragranceScentFamiliesCitrusCrosslinks,
});
