Шлейф: след аромата, который вы оставляете
Vashboo Editorial
Definition and levels
"Sillage" is borrowed from the French word for the wake a boat leaves on water. In perfumery it describes the volume of air around you that carries your scent. The accepted four levels:
- Soft: people only smell you when they hug you.
- Moderate: people in conversation distance (1 metre) catch the scent.
- Strong: people walking 2–3 metres behind you will notice.
- Very strong / "beast mode": the perfume fills the room and lingers after you leave.
What drives sillage
- Concentration. Higher percentages of aromatic oil push more molecules into the air.
- Volatile top accords. Citrus and aldehydes lift heavy base notes upward; their interaction creates projection.
- Body temperature and movement. Skin emits more molecules when warm and moving. The same perfume sits quiet on a still body and screams during a brisk walk.
- Humidity. Moist air carries scent further than dry. A perfume that is "moderate" in Dubai October can be "very strong" in a humid summer afternoon.
Choosing the right sillage for context
- Office, lift, medical appointment: soft to moderate. Strong projection invades others' space — politeness rules.
- Dinner and date: moderate. Close enough that your partner notices, not so much that the table next to yours complains.
- Nightclub, wedding, gala: strong to very strong. The room is loud and crowded; soft fades into noise.
- Cold winter outdoor: very strong is welcome. The cold air absorbs most of the radius.
Reducing or boosting sillage on demand
To soften an over-projecting perfume: spray onto clothing instead of skin, or layer with an unscented body cream that absorbs the alcohol carrier. To boost a soft one: apply on a slightly damp neck, add a single spray to the front of your shirt, and walk a bit before sitting still — kinetic skin releases more.
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