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Running
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Zero
Update app.py
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app.py
CHANGED
@@ -94,15 +94,16 @@ A short, poetic sentence — like a perfume advertisement hook.
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Poetic Olfactory Description:
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A freeform and expressive description of the scent ambiance evoked by the scene. Use rich sensory, emotional, and metaphorical language. Match the **emotional tone** of the scene: if the mood is calm, sleepy, or melancholic, avoid overly bright or energetic expressions. If the scene is painted or artistic, evoke texture, stillness, or material details rather than action or movement. Be subtle and precise.
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**Important:** Any scents, herbs, or natural elements mentioned here must be consistent with the scene’s setting. Do not invent new locations or scenery that do not appear in the description.
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Olfactory Pyramid (technical):
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Top Notes:
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List 3–4 real, concrete scent materials that would be perceived first. These must be plausible fragrance ingredients (e.g. herbs, resins, citrus peels, spices, aldehydes, etc.). Pick notes that reflect the **real mood, climate, and setting** of the scene. Do not add locations or elements that don’t appear in the scene. If the scene is indoors or includes human presence, include soft, intimate, or textural notes.
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Heart Notes:
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List 3–4 real fragrance elements that give body and soul to the perfume. They must relate directly to the **core emotion, human presence, or material textures** of the scene (e.g. warm fabric, skin, dry flowers, books, wood, canvas). If you mention herbs, flowers, or other elements in the poetic description, include them here.
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Base Notes:
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List 3–4 real, longer-lasting ingredients such as woods, musks, resins, or earthy accords. These should evoke the **depth, texture, or after-image** of the scene — warmth, silence, stillness, or time passing. Avoid generic bases unless they fit the mood. If the scene suggests furniture, old rooms, or human presence, reflect that with realistic base notes.
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The top, heart, and base notes must not introduce new ideas, plants, or places that were not in the poetic description or the scene. Make sure all notes match elements that appear in either the scene or your poetic text.
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General Atmosphere:
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**This section is mandatory.** Provide a short, elegant paragraph summarizing the fragrance’s evolution and overall emotional impression. Keep it artistic, connected to the real details of the scene, and avoid clichés. **Never omit this section.**
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Concentration Type:
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Poetic Olfactory Description:
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A freeform and expressive description of the scent ambiance evoked by the scene. Use rich sensory, emotional, and metaphorical language. Match the **emotional tone** of the scene: if the mood is calm, sleepy, or melancholic, avoid overly bright or energetic expressions. If the scene is painted or artistic, evoke texture, stillness, or material details rather than action or movement. Be subtle and precise.
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**Important:** Any scents, herbs, or natural elements mentioned here must be consistent with the scene’s setting. Do not invent new locations or scenery that do not appear in the description.
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Olfactory Pyramid (technical):
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**Important Consistency rule**: The top, heart, and base notes must not introduce new ideas, plants, or places that were not in the poetic description or the scene. Make sure all notes match elements that appear in either the scene or your poetic text.
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Top Notes:
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List 3–4 real, concrete scent materials that would be perceived first. These must be plausible fragrance ingredients (e.g. herbs, resins, citrus peels, spices, aldehydes, etc.). Pick notes that reflect the **real mood, climate, and setting** of the scene. Do not add locations or elements that don’t appear in the scene. If the scene is indoors or includes human presence, include soft, intimate, or textural notes.
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Heart Notes:
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List 3–4 real fragrance elements that give body and soul to the perfume. They must relate directly to the **core emotion, human presence, or material textures** of the scene (e.g. warm fabric, skin, dry flowers, books, wood, canvas). If you mention herbs, flowers, or other elements in the poetic description, include them here.
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Base Notes:
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List 3–4 real, longer-lasting ingredients such as woods, musks, resins, or earthy accords. These should evoke the **depth, texture, or after-image** of the scene — warmth, silence, stillness, or time passing. Avoid generic bases unless they fit the mood. If the scene suggests furniture, old rooms, or human presence, reflect that with realistic base notes.
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General Atmosphere:
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**This section is mandatory.** Provide a short, elegant paragraph summarizing the fragrance’s evolution and overall emotional impression. Keep it artistic, connected to the real details of the scene, and avoid clichés. **Never omit this section.**
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Concentration Type:
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