// Fragrance · Scent Families · Green & Musk — L3 data

const FragranceScentFamiliesGreenMusksData = {
  type: "Green & Musk",
  parent: { title: "Scent Families", href: "/en/fragrance/scent-families/" },
  grandparent: { title: "Fragrance", href: "/en/fragrance/" },
  totalCount: 98,
  hero: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1416879595882-3373a0480b5b?w=1800&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop",
  heroAlt: "Editorial close-up — fresh green leaves and clean white linen, muted natural light",
  h1: "How to wear green and musk fragrance.",
  deck: "Cut grass, galbanum, white musk, skin-close sillage. The quietest and most wearable family — and the library that explains why it's harder to build than it looks.",
  intro: "Green and musk fragrances are the most misunderstood family in perfumery, primarily because they are easy to dismiss as 'just clean' or 'like laundry.' That's not a description — it's a failure to notice the detail. The green family — galbanum, violet leaf, fig leaf, cut grass accord — works with the smell of living plant material: the sappy, sometimes bitter, sometimes watery quality of green things. The musk family is different and more complex: white musks are synthetic molecules with very specific characteristics. Some read powdery, some clean, some warm, some skin-like. The overlap between green and musk is where some of the most interesting and wearable fragrance happens — a skin scent that smells fresh from a few inches away and alive up close. Below is everything we've published on both families: how to choose between light sillage and skin sillage, when green reads crisp vs bitter, and what musk molecules actually smell like before a perfumer finishes building around them.",
  byline: "Edited by Nelly · Beauty & Style Director",
  meta: { count: 98, updated: "Updated 5 May 2026", reading: "Avg. 4 min per piece" },
};

const FragranceScentFamiliesGreenMusksSiblings = [
  { id: "floral",      title: "Floral",        n: "01", 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", cur: true,  href: "/en/fragrance/scent-families/green-musks/" },
];

const FragranceScentFamiliesGreenMusksQuickFacts = {
  defn: {
    h: "What green and musk fragrance actually covers",
    body: "Green fragrance uses notes derived from or evoking plant materials — galbanum (a resin with a bitter, green quality), violet leaf, tomato leaf, fig leaf, and cut grass synthetic accords. Musk fragrance uses synthetic molecules — Galaxolide, Habanolide, Muskenone, Iso E Super in its clean register — to create a skin-proximity effect that smells clean, warm, or powdery at close range. The two families are frequently combined because green notes provide immediate freshness and musk notes provide the long-lasting skin-close dry-down. Together they describe a large portion of everyday wear and workspace-appropriate fragrance.",
  },
  myths: [
    { m: "Musk just means a clean laundry smell.",
      t: "That describes white musk in its most commercial application. Musks range from powdery and skin-close through warm and animalic. The laundry read is one point on a wide spectrum." },
    { m: "Green fragrances are all sharp and aggressive.",
      t: "Galbanum and tomato leaf are sharp. Fig leaf and violet leaf are much gentler. The green family spans from cutting-board sap to barely-there wateriness, depending on which materials are used and how they're balanced." },
    { m: "Green and musk fragrances have no longevity.",
      t: "Green top notes are volatile. Musk molecules are not — they are some of the longest-lasting materials in perfumery. A green-opening musk fragrance will fade at the top and then become a very persistent skin scent for hours." },
  ],
};

const FragranceScentFamiliesGreenMusksBeginnerPath = {
  h: "Start here, if green and musk fragrance is new to you.",
  deck: "Five pieces, in order. About seventeen minutes of reading. Enough to understand why a fragrance can smell like almost nothing and still be extremely well-made.",
  steps: [
    { n: "01", t: "What white musk actually smells like — the molecules explained",  time: "4 min", note: "Galaxolide, Habanolide, Muskenone. What each one contributes to a musk accord." },
    { n: "02", t: "Galbanum — the bitter resin that starts the green family",        time: "3 min", note: "Where the sharp, green quality comes from and what it pairs with well." },
    { n: "03", t: "Skin sillage vs light sillage — how close-wearing works",         time: "4 min", note: "The distinction between a fragrance that projects and one that stays on your skin." },
    { n: "04", t: "Green + musk combinations — why they're the most wearable pairing", time: "3 min", note: "What happens when green freshness sits over a musk base." },
    { n: "05", t: "Office and everyday fragrance — why green-musk dominates",        time: "3 min", note: "Projection levels, inoffensiveness, and why this is the professional family." },
  ],
};

const FragranceScentFamiliesGreenMusksTrending = [
  { rank: "01", t: "White musk molecules — Galaxolide and what it actually smells like", time: "4 min", auth: "Nelly", date: "Apr 26", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1416879595882-3373a0480b5b?w=1100&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", reads: "7,882" },
  { rank: "02", t: "Galbanum — the resin behind the sharp green opening",               time: "3 min", auth: "Iris",  date: "Apr 21", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1501004318641-b39e6451bec6?w=1100&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", reads: "6,104" },
  { rank: "03", t: "Skin sillage — what it is and how to choose it",                    time: "3 min", auth: "Nelly", date: "Apr 16", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1416879595882-3373a0480b5b?w=1100&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", reads: "5,319" },
  { rank: "04", t: "Fig leaf in fragrance — the green-fruity note that isn't fruit",   time: "3 min", auth: "Iris",  date: "Apr 11", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1501004318641-b39e6451bec6?w=1100&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", reads: "4,208" },
  { rank: "05", t: "Workspace fragrance — why green and musk are the right call",       time: "4 min", auth: "Nelly", date: "Apr 06", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1416879595882-3373a0480b5b?w=1100&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", reads: "3,741" },
];

const FragranceScentFamiliesGreenMusksFormatGuide = {
  h: "Green and musk note type, by projection and context",
  deck: "Green-musk covers a range from crisp and immediate to barely-perceptible skin warmth. These are character types — not product categories.",
  formats: [
    { name: "Sharp green (galbanum)",    when: "Opening layer, when freshness needs bite",               avoid: "When you want close, warm sillage — galbanum reads cold and slightly bitter", note: "The most assertive green note. Projects cleanly. Fades in 30–45 minutes.", verdict: "Opening freshness" },
    { name: "Soft green (fig, violet leaf)", when: "Year-round, daytime, layering base",               avoid: "When you need projection — soft greens stay very close",   note: "Quieter than galbanum. A watery, slightly sweet green character.",           verdict: "Versatile" },
    { name: "Aquatic green",             when: "Hot weather, post-shower feel, casual daytime",         avoid: "Evening and formal contexts — reads too casual",           note: "Marine and green combined. Light, cool, fresh. Very low projection.",         verdict: "Summer only" },
    { name: "White musk (clean)",        when: "Everyday, professional, year-round",                    avoid: "When you want the composition to project — musk stays close", note: "The most common musk type. Clean, slightly powdery, long-lasting.",          verdict: "Default musk" },
    { name: "Warm musk",                 when: "Evening, skin-scent effect, intimate contexts",         avoid: "Professional settings or warm weather",                   note: "Musk pushed toward warmth and skin. Less laundry, more skin proximity.",     verdict: "Evening pick" },
    { name: "Powdery musk",              when: "When softness and a vintage quality is wanted",         avoid: "Pairing with very sharp or fresh notes — contrast is too strong", note: "The musk that reads like skin-warmed powder. Long-lasting, diffuse.",   verdict: "Finishing note" },
  ],
};

const FragranceScentFamiliesGreenMusksHowtos = [
  { t: "White musk molecules — Galaxolide and what it actually smells like",        time: 4, tech: "Chemistry",   auth: "Nelly", date: "Apr 26", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1416879595882-3373a0480b5b?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Chemistry",   pick: true },
  { t: "Galbanum — the resin behind the sharp green opening",                       time: 3, tech: "Notes",       auth: "Iris",  date: "Apr 21", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1501004318641-b39e6451bec6?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Notes",       pick: true },
  { t: "Skin sillage — what it is and how to choose it",                            time: 3, tech: "Application", auth: "Nelly", date: "Apr 16", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1416879595882-3373a0480b5b?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Application", pick: true },
  { t: "Fig leaf in fragrance — the green-fruity note that isn't fruit",            time: 3, tech: "Notes",       auth: "Iris",  date: "Apr 11", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1501004318641-b39e6451bec6?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Notes",       pick: true },
  { t: "Workspace fragrance — why green and musk are the right call",               time: 4, tech: "Application", auth: "Nelly", date: "Apr 06", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1416879595882-3373a0480b5b?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Application", pick: true },
  { t: "Violet leaf vs violet flower — entirely different characters",              time: 3, tech: "Notes",       auth: "Nelly", date: "Apr 01", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1501004318641-b39e6451bec6?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Notes",       pick: false },
  { t: "Cut grass accords — how perfumers reconstruct freshly mown",                time: 4, tech: "Chemistry",   auth: "Iris",  date: "Mar 27", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1416879595882-3373a0480b5b?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Chemistry",   pick: false },
  { t: "How long white musk lasts — and why it outlasts everything else",           time: 3, tech: "Skin",        auth: "Nelly", date: "Mar 22", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1501004318641-b39e6451bec6?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Skin",        pick: false },
  { t: "Aquatic green fragrance — the marine family explained",                     time: 4, tech: "Structure",   auth: "Iris",  date: "Mar 17", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1416879595882-3373a0480b5b?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Structure",   pick: false },
  { t: "Powdery musk — what 'powdery' means in a fragrance context",               time: 3, tech: "Notes",       auth: "Nelly", date: "Mar 12", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1501004318641-b39e6451bec6?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Notes",       pick: false },
  { t: "Green fragrance in winter — what reads cold vs what reads wrong",          time: 3, tech: "Season",      auth: "Iris",  date: "Mar 07", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1416879595882-3373a0480b5b?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Season",      pick: false },
  { t: "How musk molecules interact with skin — the bio-chemistry",                time: 4, tech: "Chemistry",   auth: "Nelly", date: "Mar 02", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1501004318641-b39e6451bec6?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Chemistry",   pick: false },
  { t: "Tomato leaf — the most unusual green note and where it works",             time: 3, tech: "Notes",       auth: "Iris",  date: "Feb 25", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1416879595882-3373a0480b5b?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Notes",       pick: false },
  { t: "Why green fragrance reads differently on heated skin",                     time: 3, tech: "Skin",        auth: "Nelly", date: "Feb 20", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1501004318641-b39e6451bec6?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Skin",        pick: false },
  { t: "Layering musk — what it anchors and what it softens",                     time: 4, tech: "Layering",    auth: "Nelly", date: "Feb 15", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1416879595882-3373a0480b5b?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Layering",    pick: false },
  { t: "The clean fragrance category — where green-musk fits in",                  time: 4, tech: "Essay",       auth: "Nelly", date: "Feb 10", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1501004318641-b39e6451bec6?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Essay",       pick: false },
  { t: "Habanolide and Muskenone — the musk molecules less talked about",          time: 4, tech: "Chemistry",   auth: "Iris",  date: "Feb 05", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1416879595882-3373a0480b5b?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Chemistry",   pick: false },
  { t: "Green floral — when green notes soften with flowers",                      time: 3, tech: "Structure",   auth: "Nelly", date: "Jan 30", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1501004318641-b39e6451bec6?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Structure",   pick: false },
  { t: "Concentration in musk fragrance — why higher isn't always more",           time: 3, tech: "Concentration", auth: "Iris", date: "Jan 25", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1416879595882-3373a0480b5b?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Concentration", pick: false },
  { t: "The minimalist fragrance — green and musk as a design statement",          time: 5, tech: "Essay",       auth: "Nelly", date: "Jan 20", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1501004318641-b39e6451bec6?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Essay",       pick: false },
];

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

const FragranceScentFamiliesGreenMusksCrosslinks = [
  { id: "floral",  title: "Floral",  deck: "Rose, jasmine, tuberose. The flower-forward family.",      count: 138, href: "/en/fragrance/scent-families/floral/" },
  { id: "citrus",  title: "Citrus",  deck: "Bergamot, lemon, yuzu. Brightness and volatility.",       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/" },
];

Object.assign(window, {
  FragranceScentFamiliesGreenMusksData,
  FragranceScentFamiliesGreenMusksSiblings,
  FragranceScentFamiliesGreenMusksQuickFacts,
  FragranceScentFamiliesGreenMusksBeginnerPath,
  FragranceScentFamiliesGreenMusksTrending,
  FragranceScentFamiliesGreenMusksFormatGuide,
  FragranceScentFamiliesGreenMusksHowtos,
  FragranceScentFamiliesGreenMusksTechFilters,
  FragranceScentFamiliesGreenMusksCrosslinks,
});
