Drop a real moment
I wore vanilla outside and it became too sweet.
A short note is enough.
Perfume changes with your skin, weather, place, and time. GoodSmell remembers what happened before, then helps you understand what to wear, avoid, test, or save next.
Use it in three steps: note what happened, ask what it means, and get a smarter scent read next time.
Scent diary
Citrus faded fast in humid weather. Woody musk lasted longer at night. Avoid heavy vanilla outdoors.
001 / How it works
No fragrance jargon. No long forms. You bring the moment, GoodSmell turns it into a useful read.
I wore vanilla outside and it became too sweet.
A short note is enough.
Heat, humidity, travel, and time of day change how perfume behaves.
Weather is read automatically.
GoodSmell explains what likely happened and what to try next.
Clear advice, not a shopping list.
002 / What it remembers
003 / Why it matters
Sweet, woody, citrus, and musky notes can sit differently depending on your skin and body heat.
Humidity can make dense scents louder, while dry air can make fresh notes feel sharper.
A scent that works at night may feel heavy at lunch or too quiet outdoors.
GoodSmell gets better when it knows what actually happened to you before.
004 / Bring questions like these
005 / More ways to use it
006 / A better scent routine
Use GoodSmell after a wear, after a compliment, after a bad dry-down, or before travelling. The more honest your notes are, the more useful your scent read becomes.