// Fragrance · Scent Families · Floral — L3 data

const FragranceScentFamiliesFloralData = {
  type: "Floral",
  parent: { title: "Scent Families", href: "/en/fragrance/scent-families/" },
  grandparent: { title: "Fragrance", href: "/en/fragrance/" },
  totalCount: 138,
  hero: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1490750967868-88df5691cc6a?w=1800&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop",
  heroAlt: "Editorial close-up — rose petals and fragrance bottle, warm natural light",
  h1: "How to wear floral fragrance.",
  deck: "From soliflores to complex bouquets. The full library of floral scent techniques, note pairings, and when to choose flower over everything else.",
  intro: "Floral is the largest category in fragrance — and also the most misread. People who say they don't like florals usually mean they don't like a specific kind: the oversweet, indolic white flowers of 1990s department stores. Modern florals are structural. They are green, watery, aldehydic, powdery, or mineral depending on the raw materials and the processing. A rose EdP can smell like cut stems in cold water or like lipstick or like Turkish delight — same flower, entirely different experience. The question isn't whether to wear floral. It's which floral construction suits your skin chemistry and your context. Below is everything we've published on the subject: note behaviour, format choices, season strategies, and how to tell a soliflore from a bouquet without picking up a bottle.",
  byline: "Edited by Nelly · Beauty & Style Director",
  meta: { count: 138, updated: "Updated 1 May 2026", reading: "Avg. 4 min per piece" },
};

const FragranceScentFamiliesFloralSiblings = [
  { id: "floral",      title: "Floral",        n: "01", cur: true,  href: "/en/fragrance/scent-families/floral/" },
  { id: "citrus",      title: "Citrus",        n: "02", 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 FragranceScentFamiliesFloralQuickFacts = {
  defn: {
    h: "What the floral family actually contains",
    body: "Floral fragrance covers any scent where one or more flowers — rose, jasmine, tuberose, peony, iris, violet, lily of the valley, orange blossom — form the dominant accord. It divides into soliflores (a single flower in focus) and bouquets (a constructed multi-flower blend). The flower itself is almost never the raw material; most floral notes are synthetic reconstructions, because the real extracted oil is too expensive or too unstable to use at scale. What you smell is the perfumer's interpretation of the flower.",
  },
  myths: [
    { m: "Floral fragrance is feminine.",
      t: "The floral-is-feminine convention is a marketing invention. Historically, men wore heavy rose and orange blossom colognes. Skin chemistry, concentration, and pairing determine how a floral reads — not the wearer." },
    { m: "Soliflores smell exactly like the flower.",
      t: "No floral fragrance smells exactly like the raw flower. Perfumers reconstruct a version of the bloom — often exaggerating specific facets, like the green stem note or the powdery heart — to make it wearable and stable on skin." },
    { m: "Floral fragrances are light and low-sillage.",
      t: "Tuberose, jasmine, and ylang-ylang are some of the most projecting materials in perfumery. A tuberose soliflore can fill a room. Sillage is a function of concentration and specific notes, not family." },
  ],
};

const FragranceScentFamiliesFloralBeginnerPath = {
  h: "Start here, if floral fragrance is new to you.",
  deck: "Five pieces, in order. About eighteen minutes of reading. Enough to understand why florals smell so different from each other.",
  steps: [
    { n: "01", t: "Soliflore vs bouquet — the first floral distinction",         time: "3 min", note: "What it means when a fragrance is built around one flower versus many." },
    { n: "02", t: "Rose in fragrance — the spectrum from cold stem to Turkish delight", time: "4 min", note: "The single most-used flower in perfumery and its range of possible expressions." },
    { n: "03", t: "White florals — jasmine, tuberose, orange blossom",           time: "4 min", note: "The heavy, indolic florals that project and last. Why they are polarising and how to approach them." },
    { n: "04", t: "Top, heart, base — how floral notes evolve on skin",          time: "4 min", note: "Why a fragrance smells different at 10 minutes versus 3 hours, and what that means for florals specifically." },
    { n: "05", t: "Floral concentration guide — EdT vs EdP vs parfum",           time: "3 min", note: "How the same floral accord behaves differently across concentration levels." },
  ],
};

const FragranceScentFamiliesFloralTrending = [
  { rank: "01", t: "Rose EdP vs rose EdT — why concentration changes the smell entirely", time: "4 min", auth: "Nelly", date: "Apr 29", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1490750967868-88df5691cc6a?w=1100&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", reads: "10,841" },
  { rank: "02", t: "How to wear tuberose without overpowering a room",                    time: "3 min", auth: "Iris",  date: "Apr 24", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1558618666-fcd25c85cd64?w=1100&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", reads: "8,203" },
  { rank: "03", t: "Peony in fragrance — what it actually smells like",                   time: "3 min", auth: "Nelly", date: "Apr 19", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1527799820374-dcf8d9d4a388?w=1100&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", reads: "6,974" },
  { rank: "04", t: "Jasmine absolute vs jasmine sambac — the material difference",        time: "4 min", auth: "Nelly", date: "Apr 14", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1608571423902-eed4a5ad8108?w=1100&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", reads: "5,882" },
  { rank: "05", t: "Iris root — why it smells like powder and carrot at once",            time: "3 min", auth: "Iris",  date: "Apr 09", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1490750967868-88df5691cc6a?w=1100&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", reads: "4,651" },
];

const FragranceScentFamiliesFloralFormatGuide = {
  h: "Floral note type, by occasion and skin behaviour",
  deck: "The right floral for the right context. These are note categories, not specific products.",
  formats: [
    { name: "Rose (cold/green)",     when: "Professional settings, layering as a base, year-round", avoid: "When you want impact and projection",            note: "The stem-cold rose reads clean and formal. Strong on dry skin, quieter on oily.", verdict: "Versatile" },
    { name: "Rose (warm/powdery)",   when: "Evening, skin-scent effect, intimate wear",             avoid: "Hot weather — the powder reads heavy",            note: "The warm rose interpretation: lipstick, powder, skin. Lasts exceptionally long.", verdict: "Evening pick" },
    { name: "Jasmine",               when: "Spring and autumn, evening projection needed",          avoid: "Close-contact situations — indole reads animalic", note: "Strong projection, complex, long-lasting. The indole note is intentional.", verdict: "Projecting" },
    { name: "Tuberose",              when: "Statement wear, cooler months",                        avoid: "Heat — it amplifies rapidly on warm skin",           note: "The most projecting white floral. One spray is usually correct.",             verdict: "Use restraint" },
    { name: "Lily of the valley",    when: "Daytime, spring wear, fresher floral occasions",       avoid: "Formal evening — it reads young and light",         note: "Clean, watery, green. The opposite of tuberose projection.",                  verdict: "Daytime" },
    { name: "Orange blossom",        when: "Year-round, warm climates, skin-close sillage",        avoid: "Layering with other white florals — too loud",       note: "Sweet, honeyed, slightly soapy. Pairs well with woody and amber bases.",      verdict: "All-rounder" },
  ],
};

const FragranceScentFamiliesFloralHowtos = [
  { t: "Rose EdP vs rose EdT — why concentration changes the smell entirely",       time: 4, tech: "Concentration", auth: "Nelly", date: "Apr 29", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1490750967868-88df5691cc6a?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Concentration", pick: true },
  { t: "How to wear tuberose without overpowering a room",                          time: 3, tech: "Application",  auth: "Iris",  date: "Apr 24", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1558618666-fcd25c85cd64?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Application",  pick: true },
  { t: "Peony in fragrance — what it actually smells like",                         time: 3, tech: "Notes",        auth: "Nelly", date: "Apr 19", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1527799820374-dcf8d9d4a388?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Notes",        pick: true },
  { t: "Jasmine absolute vs jasmine sambac — the material difference",              time: 4, tech: "Notes",        auth: "Nelly", date: "Apr 14", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1608571423902-eed4a5ad8108?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Notes",        pick: true },
  { t: "Iris root — why it smells like powder and carrot at once",                  time: 3, tech: "Notes",        auth: "Iris",  date: "Apr 09", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1490750967868-88df5691cc6a?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Notes",        pick: true },
  { t: "Soliflore vs bouquet — reading the fragrance brief",                        time: 3, tech: "Structure",    auth: "Nelly", date: "Apr 05", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1558618666-fcd25c85cd64?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Structure",    pick: false },
  { t: "Orange blossom and neroli — the same flower, two different extractions",    time: 4, tech: "Notes",        auth: "Iris",  date: "Apr 01", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1527799820374-dcf8d9d4a388?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Notes",        pick: false },
  { t: "Indole — the animal edge in white florals",                                 time: 3, tech: "Chemistry",    auth: "Nelly", date: "Mar 27", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1608571423902-eed4a5ad8108?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Chemistry",    pick: false },
  { t: "Floral fragrance in summer — managing projection",                          time: 4, tech: "Season",       auth: "Iris",  date: "Mar 23", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1490750967868-88df5691cc6a?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Season",       pick: false },
  { t: "Violet leaf vs violet flower — two entirely different accords",             time: 3, tech: "Notes",        auth: "Nelly", date: "Mar 18", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1558618666-fcd25c85cd64?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Notes",        pick: false },
  { t: "How florals behave on dry skin versus oily skin",                           time: 4, tech: "Skin",         auth: "Iris",  date: "Mar 14", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1527799820374-dcf8d9d4a388?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Skin",         pick: false },
  { t: "Lily of the valley — the green-clean floral",                               time: 3, tech: "Notes",        auth: "Nelly", date: "Mar 09", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1608571423902-eed4a5ad8108?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Notes",        pick: false },
  { t: "Floral-woody blends — where the flower goes structural",                    time: 4, tech: "Structure",    auth: "Nelly", date: "Mar 05", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1490750967868-88df5691cc6a?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Structure",    pick: false },
  { t: "How a perfumer reconstructs rose — the 200-ingredient problem",             time: 5, tech: "Essay",        auth: "Nelly", date: "Feb 28", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1558618666-fcd25c85cd64?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Essay",        pick: false },
  { t: "Floral fragrance layering — which flowers stack without fighting",          time: 4, tech: "Layering",     auth: "Iris",  date: "Feb 23", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1527799820374-dcf8d9d4a388?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Layering",     pick: false },
  { t: "Aldehydic florals — what the old-school soapy note actually is",            time: 4, tech: "Chemistry",    auth: "Nelly", date: "Feb 18", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1608571423902-eed4a5ad8108?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Chemistry",    pick: false },
  { t: "Floral projection in cold weather vs warm weather",                         time: 3, tech: "Season",       auth: "Iris",  date: "Feb 13", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1490750967868-88df5691cc6a?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Season",       pick: false },
  { t: "Rose and oud — the pairing that works",                                    time: 4, tech: "Layering",     auth: "Nelly", date: "Feb 08", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1558618666-fcd25c85cd64?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Layering",     pick: false },
  { t: "Magnolia in fragrance — a note that doesn't smell like the tree",          time: 3, tech: "Notes",        auth: "Iris",  date: "Feb 03", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1527799820374-dcf8d9d4a388?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Notes",        pick: false },
  { t: "The longevity problem — why florals fade fastest on certain skin types",   time: 4, tech: "Skin",         auth: "Nelly", date: "Jan 28", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1608571423902-eed4a5ad8108?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Skin",         pick: false },
];

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

const FragranceScentFamiliesFloralCrosslinks = [
  { id: "citrus",      title: "Citrus",       deck: "Bright, tart, immediate. The freshness family.",           count: 112, href: "/en/fragrance/scent-families/citrus/" },
  { 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, {
  FragranceScentFamiliesFloralData,
  FragranceScentFamiliesFloralSiblings,
  FragranceScentFamiliesFloralQuickFacts,
  FragranceScentFamiliesFloralBeginnerPath,
  FragranceScentFamiliesFloralTrending,
  FragranceScentFamiliesFloralFormatGuide,
  FragranceScentFamiliesFloralHowtos,
  FragranceScentFamiliesFloralTechFilters,
  FragranceScentFamiliesFloralCrosslinks,
});
