I've been around the pheromone niche for over ten years, which means people send me questions about every product whose name contains the word "pheromone." Marilyn Miglin's Pheromone comes up from time to time. So let me save you the scroll: no, it doesn't contain actual pheromones. It's a 1978 fragrance with a name that has pointed people at the wrong product for forty-seven
Fragrance Reviews & Dupes: Designer, Clone & Mainstream Breakdowns
Which fragrances actually perform, and which dupes hit harder than the originals?
This archive is the answer. Honest reviews of mainstream colognes and perfumes, designer house breakdowns, dupe and clone comparisons, and the scent notes (bergamot, oud, ambroxan, ISO E Super) that separate a fragrance that turns heads from one that fades by lunch. No paid placements. No house favoritism. Real-world performance: projection, longevity, compliments, and whether the bottle was worth its asking price.
Start with one of our most-read mainstream reviews: Marilyn Miglin.
ISO E Super: The Synthetic Note That Behaves Like a Pheromone
ISO E Super Is the Synthetic Fragrance Note That Activates a Human Pheromone Receptor The story most fragrance writers tell about ISO E Super is the one where the wearer can't smell it and everyone else can. Spray Molecule 01 on the wrist in the morning, lose track of the scent inside half an hour, and at some point in the next several hours a stranger asks what you're wearing. The bottle

