Hero card
Bottle photo, name, status, performance bars, and an at-a-glance fact strip.
The detail page is the home for a single fragrance. It pulls together the bottle photo, the note pyramid, performance, your wear history, ratings, and the containers you hold, along with the actions you reach for most: logging a wear, editing, sharing, and more. This article walks through what you see there and what each part does.
Open a fragrance’s detail page whenever you want the full picture of one scent rather than a quick glance across your whole collection. It is the right place to:
To open a fragrance’s detail page, tap any fragrance in your Collection (in grid or list view), or tap a result from search. From there the most common thing to do is log a wear, so start there.
Two log paths sit in the top toolbar.
After a one-tap log, a short “Logged” message appears with an Undo button, so a mistaken tap is easy to take back without hunting for the entry in your diary.
You can also log a wear from the hero card itself: when a scent has no performance data yet, the hero shows a “Log a wear” button.
The detail page is a stack of cards. Here is the map of the main sections before we walk through each one.
Hero card
Bottle photo, name, status, performance bars, and an at-a-glance fact strip.
Note pyramid
Top, heart, and base notes, accords, and your personal notes.
Scent fingerprint
The shape of the scent through its dry-down, with an optional taste overlay.
Your journey
The containers you hold, your status, and your decision about the scent.
Bottle
Ownership facts for a single full bottle: shelf, size, price, batch code.
Profile and Best for
Perfumer, release year, and the seasons and occasions you have set.
Wear diary
Your recent wears of this scent, each tappable for the full entry.
Data-dependent cards
Match, dupes, crowd reception, and more, shown only when they have something to say.
The top of the page is the hero card: a large, scent-tinted card with the bottle photo (or a brand monogram if there is no photo), the brand emblem, and the name. Below the photo it shows a status pill (which also names the format, such as bottle, sample, decant, or tester), a quiet line with concentration, rating, and scent family, and a “Performance” section.
The Performance section charts the average longevity, projection, and sillage from your logged wears. If you have not recorded any of those yet, it invites you to add them to a wear so the bars can fill in.
Below performance, a small strip of cells summarizes at-a-glance facts drawn from your real data: wear count, last worn (or the date added), sprays left, and cost per wear. Cells only appear when there is data behind them, so a brand-new scent shows a single calm line rather than a row of zeros.
The “Note pyramid” card lists the top, heart, and base notes, plus any accords and your personal notes. Tap a note name to open its full glossary entry. If a scent has accords but no pyramid, the card simply shows “Accords.”
The “Scent fingerprint” card draws the shape of the scent as a seal that morphs through its dry-down (top, heart, base) on a slow loop. Tap a side of the shape to see which notes, accords, or family push it in that direction. If you turn on “Show my taste,” the seal sits over a dashed outline of your whole collection’s taste shape so you can compare the two. Motion in this card is paused automatically if you have Reduce Motion turned on in your device settings.
The “Your journey” card tracks the physical containers you hold of a scent: bottles, decants, samples, and testers. You can also set a status (Owned, Tried, or Wishlist) and a journey decision chip here.
The journey decision chip records where you have landed on a scent after living with it: a quick label like “Keeping it,” “Repurchase,” “On the fence,” or “Pass.” It is just for you, to capture a verdict you can scan later. It does not change performance or move the scent off your shelf.
To add a container:
To edit a container, tap it in the list. To remove one, open it and tap “Remove this container.”
The “Bottle” card shows ownership facts when they exist: shelf, size, price, a bottle-level meter when you have set a total spray count (or a “Sprays used” line otherwise), batch code, and a “Source” link if you saved one. The batch code is the small printed code on the bottle or box that identifies its production run; people use it to estimate how old a bottle is or to tell two purchases apart. It is optional, and you enter it in the editor. Prices are hidden everywhere when you turn on “Hide prices” in Settings.
The “Profile” card shows the perfumer and release year when they are filled in. If you own other fragrances by the same perfumer, a tappable row takes you to a list of them. The “Best for” card shows the seasons and occasions you have set.
The “Wear diary” card lists your recent wears of this scent (up to the most recent eight), each showing the date, mood, longevity, projection, and any rating. It can also note where you usually wear it (for example “Usually on wrists”). Tap any entry to open its full diary detail.
The other toolbar button (the “Options” menu, an ellipsis icon) holds the rest of the actions.
| Action | What it does |
|---|---|
| Edit | Opens the full editor for every field of the fragrance. |
| Add favorite / Remove favorite | Toggles the heart. |
| Share card | Opens the share card studio to create a shareable image. |
| Draft a review | Drafts a review you can edit. Appears only when on-device intelligence is available and you have enough logged experience to ground it. See AI Features for the device requirement. |
| Mark as a dupe of… / Edit dupe | Marks this scent as a dupe of another and records how close it smells, how it differs, and optionally tells the community. |
| Find similar | Shows catalog fragrances that match this one’s notes, with the shared notes and a match percentage. You can add one to your collection from there. |
| Report an issue | Flags the shared catalog entry behind this scent for review. |
| Delete | Removes the scent (asks you to confirm first). |
Three features here surface look-alike scents in different ways. They are easy to mix up, so here is the short version.
| Feature | Where it lives | What it does |
|---|---|---|
| Find similar | Options menu | Catalog scents that share this one’s notes, with a match percentage. Add one to your collection. |
| Smells like | A data-dependent card | Crowd-sourced dupe matches, with a closeness badge and a price-savings hint when known. |
| Mark as a dupe | Options menu | Your own declaration that this scent is a dupe of a specific original, and how it differs. |
For the full picture of how dupes work, see Discover and Dupes.
Several cards appear only when they have something to say.
| Card | What it shows | When it appears |
|---|---|---|
| Match for you Free | How well a scent fits the taste learned from your other fragrances. | Once you have at least three other fragrances with notes in your collection. |
| Layers well with Pro | Owned scents and scent bases that pair well with this one. | Only for owned scents, only with Pro, and only when there is a complementary scent to suggest. |
| Before you buy Free | Whether you already own something a lot like it, so you can decide if it would bring something new. | On a Wishlist scent. |
| Smells like Free | Community dupe matches with a closeness badge and, when known, a price-savings hint. You can tap “Suggest” to add your own match; your suggestion shows as “pending” until a few people agree. | When community dupe matches exist. |
| Dupe of Free | A comparison of notes, price, and performance against the original. | When you have marked the scent as a dupe. |
| You vs the crowd Free | Your own readings against the anonymous community average. | Once you have worn the scent. |
If a scent is missing details, a “Complete this scent” card appears with a progress ring and a tappable chip for each missing piece. Tap a chip to jump into the editor. The chips can include:
On a Mac or iPad with a wide window, the page splits into two columns. The scent’s own identity sits on the left (hero, notes, fingerprint) and how it relates to you and the crowd sits on the right (match, dupes, crowd reception, ownership). On iPhone and in narrow windows, all the same cards stack into a single scrolling column.