// Fragrance · Wardrobe · Second Skin — L3 data

const FragranceWardrobeSecondSkinData = {
  type: "Second Skin Scent",
  parent: { title: "Wardrobe", href: "/en/fragrance/wardrobe/" },
  grandparent: { title: "Fragrance", href: "/en/fragrance/" },
  totalCount: 112,
  hero: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1571781926291-c477ebfd024b?w=1800&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop",
  heroAlt: "Editorial close-up — warm skin texture, soft diffused light",
  h1: "How to find your second-skin scent.",
  deck: "Scent that reads as your skin amplified. The full library on skin chemistry, categories that vanish into you, and how to find the one that disappears into your biology.",
  intro: "A second-skin scent is the hardest fragrance category to shop for because the result you are aiming for — something that smells like you, but better — is nearly invisible in a bottle. You cannot identify it by sniffing strips. You cannot identify it in the first hour of wear. You find it when someone leans close and says they cannot quite describe what you are wearing but they want to know. The chemistry behind this is real: certain note families — clean musks, skin ambers, some light woods — interact with sebum and body warmth in ways that blur the line between fragrance and skin. Below is everything we've published on understanding skin chemistry, the note families that tend to disappear into rather than sit on top of skin, and the testing methodology that finds the right one for you specifically.",
  byline: "Edited by Nelly · Beauty & Style Director",
  meta: { count: 112, updated: "Updated 29 April 2026", reading: "Avg. 4 min per piece" },
};

const FragranceWardrobeSecondSkinSiblings = [
  { id: "signature",    title: "Signature",         n: "01",             href: "/en/fragrance/wardrobe/signature/" },
  { id: "second-skin",  title: "Second Skin",        n: "02", cur: true,  href: "/en/fragrance/wardrobe/second-skin/" },
  { id: "office",       title: "Office",             n: "03",             href: "/en/fragrance/wardrobe/office/" },
  { id: "evening",      title: "Evening",            n: "04",             href: "/en/fragrance/wardrobe/evening/" },
  { id: "storage-edit", title: "Storage & Editing",  n: "05",             href: "/en/fragrance/wardrobe/storage-edit/" },
];

const FragranceWardrobeSecondSkinQuickFacts = {
  defn: {
    h: "What 'second-skin scent' actually means",
    body: "A second-skin scent is a fragrance that interacts with your skin's pH, warmth, and sebum to produce something that reads as your skin's natural scent enhanced rather than a perfume placed on top of you. The effect depends heavily on note selection — clean musks and skin ambers are the most reliable categories — and on your individual chemistry. Not every fragrance that claims to be skin-like will behave this way on you specifically.",
  },
  myths: [
    { m: "Any clean or neutral fragrance will read as skin.",
      t: "Clean is a marketing category, not a chemical one. Clean musks are the reliable category. Many 'clean' fragrances are simply sharp and light, which is different from reading as skin." },
    { m: "A second-skin fragrance should be completely undetectable.",
      t: "The goal is not absence. A well-chosen second-skin scent can have real presence to someone standing close. It just doesn't announce itself across a room before you do." },
    { m: "Skin chemistry is consistent for everyone.",
      t: "Skin pH, hormone levels, diet, and hydration all shift how a fragrance behaves. The same amber that disappears into one person will sit like a resinous cloud on another." },
  ],
};

const FragranceWardrobeSecondSkinBeginnerPath = {
  h: "Start here, if second-skin is new to you.",
  deck: "Five pieces, in order. About twenty minutes of reading. Enough to understand skin chemistry and begin testing correctly.",
  steps: [
    { n: "01", t: "Skin chemistry and fragrance — what actually happens on your skin", time: "4 min", note: "pH, warmth, and sebum. Why fragrance doesn't smell the same on everyone." },
    { n: "02", t: "Clean musk note families — the most reliable second-skin category",  time: "3 min", note: "What makes musk read as skin rather than as a product." },
    { n: "03", t: "Skin ambers — how they warm and soften on skin over time",            time: "4 min", note: "The amber family that reads sweet on the bottle and biological in wear." },
    { n: "04", t: "How to test for second-skin results — the six-hour method",          time: "3 min", note: "Why strip testing fails you here and how to test correctly." },
    { n: "05", t: "Light woods that disappear — vetiver, sandalwood, and the dry-downs", time: "4 min", note: "The woody categories that tend to integrate rather than project." },
  ],
};

const FragranceWardrobeSecondSkinTrending = [
  { rank: "01", t: "Skin chemistry and fragrance — what actually changes on your skin", time: "4 min", auth: "Nelly", date: "Apr 26", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1571781926291-c477ebfd024b?w=1100&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", reads: "9,714" },
  { rank: "02", t: "Clean musk note families — what makes them read as skin",          time: "3 min", auth: "Iris",  date: "Apr 22", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1601147532562-47ce1aaf3ea6?w=1100&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", reads: "8,133" },
  { rank: "03", t: "Skin ambers — warmth and dry-down over a full wear cycle",         time: "4 min", auth: "Nelly", date: "Apr 17", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1590156562745-5dd579f4e7b0?w=1100&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", reads: "6,897" },
  { rank: "04", t: "The six-hour testing method for second-skin fragrances",           time: "3 min", auth: "Nelly", date: "Apr 11", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1592945403244-b3fbafd7f539?w=1100&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", reads: "5,801" },
  { rank: "05", t: "Vetiver, sandalwood, and the woods that integrate into skin",      time: "4 min", auth: "Iris",  date: "Apr 06", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1543628697-8d5bc6c6e1de?w=1100&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", reads: "5,012" },
];

const FragranceWardrobeSecondSkinFormatGuide = {
  h: "Scent category, by skin-chemistry interaction",
  deck: "Which note families tend to vanish into skin — and which ones don't. Chemistry varies by person; test everything before committing.",
  formats: [
    { name: "Clean musk",          when: "All year, any context, any skin type",           avoid: "Expecting sillage — these are close-skin by design",   note: "The most reliably second-skin category. Reads as warmth and presence, not product.",       verdict: "Start here" },
    { name: "Skin amber",          when: "Cooler months, warm skin, evening into day",     avoid: "Oily skin types — can tip sweet or heavy",             note: "Benzyl benzoate and skin-amber accords disappear into warmth. Long dry-down required.",   verdict: "Best all-rounder" },
    { name: "Dry sandalwood",      when: "Year-round, works under everything",             avoid: "Cheap sandalwood substitutes — they don't behave the same way", note: "Creamy on the surface, integrative on warm skin. Test specifically for your pH.",       verdict: "Reliable anchor" },
    { name: "Vetiver",             when: "Warm climates, physical activity, any season",   avoid: "Cold climates — reads earthy and distant in the cold", note: "Dries down to a dry skin-like base on warm skin. One of the most gender-neutral categories.", verdict: "Contextual" },
    { name: "Skin-note accord",    when: "When the goal is purely biological presence",    avoid: "Anyone wanting to be noticed across a room",           note: "Formulated to mimic clean skin. Projection is intentionally minimal.",                   verdict: "True second-skin" },
    { name: "Light iris/violet",   when: "Fair skin, cooler months, indoor environments", avoid: "Combination with other powdery notes — can tip chalky", note: "Powdery categories can read skin-like but are less reliable across different skin chemistries.", verdict: "Skin-type dependent" },
  ],
};

const FragranceWardrobeSecondSkinHowtos = [
  { t: "Skin chemistry and fragrance — what actually changes on your skin",          time: 4, tech: "Chemistry",  auth: "Nelly", date: "Apr 26", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1571781926291-c477ebfd024b?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Chemistry",  pick: true },
  { t: "Clean musk note families — what makes them read as skin",                   time: 3, tech: "Notes",      auth: "Iris",  date: "Apr 22", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1601147532562-47ce1aaf3ea6?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Notes",      pick: true },
  { t: "Skin ambers — warmth, dry-down, and how they behave over six hours",        time: 4, tech: "Notes",      auth: "Nelly", date: "Apr 18", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1590156562745-5dd579f4e7b0?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Notes",      pick: true },
  { t: "The six-hour testing method for second-skin fragrances",                    time: 3, tech: "Testing",    auth: "Nelly", date: "Apr 14", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1592945403244-b3fbafd7f539?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Testing",    pick: true },
  { t: "Vetiver and sandalwood — the woods that integrate rather than project",     time: 4, tech: "Notes",      auth: "Iris",  date: "Apr 10", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1543628697-8d5bc6c6e1de?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Notes",      pick: true },
  { t: "Skin pH and fragrance — how to test your own baseline",                     time: 3, tech: "Chemistry",  auth: "Iris",  date: "Apr 06", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1571781926291-c477ebfd024b?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Chemistry",  pick: false },
  { t: "How body temperature affects fragrance dry-down",                           time: 4, tech: "Chemistry",  auth: "Nelly", date: "Apr 02", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1601147532562-47ce1aaf3ea6?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Chemistry",  pick: false },
  { t: "Skin-note accords explained — what they are and how they work",             time: 3, tech: "Notes",      auth: "Iris",  date: "Mar 28", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1590156562745-5dd579f4e7b0?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Notes",      pick: false },
  { t: "Oily skin and second-skin fragrance — categories that still work",          time: 4, tech: "Chemistry",  auth: "Nelly", date: "Mar 24", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1592945403244-b3fbafd7f539?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Chemistry",  pick: false },
  { t: "Dry skin and second-skin fragrance — what longevity to expect",             time: 3, tech: "Chemistry",  auth: "Iris",  date: "Mar 19", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1543628697-8d5bc6c6e1de?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Chemistry",  pick: false },
  { t: "Iris and violet as skin-like categories — when they work",                  time: 3, tech: "Notes",      auth: "Nelly", date: "Mar 15", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1571781926291-c477ebfd024b?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Notes",      pick: false },
  { t: "Musk sensitivity — when a skin scent becomes too much",                     time: 4, tech: "Testing",    auth: "Iris",  date: "Mar 10", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1601147532562-47ce1aaf3ea6?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Testing",    pick: false },
  { t: "How humidity changes second-skin performance",                              time: 3, tech: "Chemistry",  auth: "Nelly", date: "Mar 06", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1590156562745-5dd579f4e7b0?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Chemistry",  pick: false },
  { t: "The second-skin essay — why invisible is a form of presence",              time: 6, tech: "Essay",      auth: "Nelly", date: "Mar 02", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1592945403244-b3fbafd7f539?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Essay",      pick: false },
  { t: "How to wear a second-skin scent for maximum effect",                        time: 3, tech: "Testing",    auth: "Iris",  date: "Feb 26", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1543628697-8d5bc6c6e1de?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Testing",    pick: false },
  { t: "Application point for second-skin fragrances — pulse points vs skin",      time: 4, tech: "Testing",    auth: "Nelly", date: "Feb 22", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1571781926291-c477ebfd024b?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Testing",    pick: false },
  { t: "When a second-skin fragrance stops reading as skin — what changed",         time: 3, tech: "Chemistry",  auth: "Iris",  date: "Feb 17", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1601147532562-47ce1aaf3ea6?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Chemistry",  pick: false },
  { t: "Layering with a second-skin base — what to add and what to avoid",          time: 4, tech: "Notes",      auth: "Nelly", date: "Feb 13", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1590156562745-5dd579f4e7b0?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Notes",      pick: false },
  { t: "The case for wearing less — why second-skin fragrances reward restraint",   time: 5, tech: "Essay",      auth: "Nelly", date: "Feb 09", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1592945403244-b3fbafd7f539?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Essay",      pick: false },
  { t: "Fragrance and skin barrier — when product interaction affects scent",       time: 3, tech: "Chemistry",  auth: "Iris",  date: "Feb 04", img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1543628697-8d5bc6c6e1de?w=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop", kick: "Chemistry",  pick: false },
];

const FragranceWardrobeSecondSkinTechFilters = ["All", "Chemistry", "Notes", "Testing", "Essay"];

const FragranceWardrobeSecondSkinCrosslinks = [
  { id: "signature",    title: "Signature",         deck: "One fragrance that reads as distinctly you.",   count: 138, href: "/en/fragrance/wardrobe/signature/" },
  { id: "office",       title: "Office",            deck: "Measured projection. Note families that work.",  count: 98,  href: "/en/fragrance/wardrobe/office/" },
  { id: "evening",      title: "Evening",           deck: "Occasion-appropriate weight and sillage.",       count: 121, href: "/en/fragrance/wardrobe/evening/" },
  { id: "storage-edit", title: "Storage & Editing", deck: "How to maintain and edit what you keep.",        count: 87,  href: "/en/fragrance/wardrobe/storage-edit/" },
];

Object.assign(window, {
  FragranceWardrobeSecondSkinData,
  FragranceWardrobeSecondSkinSiblings,
  FragranceWardrobeSecondSkinQuickFacts,
  FragranceWardrobeSecondSkinBeginnerPath,
  FragranceWardrobeSecondSkinTrending,
  FragranceWardrobeSecondSkinFormatGuide,
  FragranceWardrobeSecondSkinHowtos,
  FragranceWardrobeSecondSkinTechFilters,
  FragranceWardrobeSecondSkinCrosslinks,
});
