You’re spraying Pulse Points. Wrists. Neck. That’s why Phlur Missing Person evaporates in 45 minutes on you.
Your skin heat literally burns off the ISO E Super before it can even bloom. The real trick? Spray fabric, not skin. Cotton holds the molecule. Your pulse points just hate you.
It’s a $28 body mist — not a perfume. The brand calls it “a second skin scent.” I call it “the ghost of a cashmere sweater.”
Skin chemistry roulette
On some people it’s salty skin. On me? Play-Doh for 20 minutes before it settles.
Zero alcohol burn
Feels like spraying cool water. Which is nice — but also why it doesn’t stick.
The “missing” is literal
The bottle is designed to look half-empty. Cute. Irritating when you pay for it.
Photo: Laura Chouette / Unsplash
There’s no perfume oil here — it’s all aroma molecules and synthetics designed to blur into your natural scent. The hero ingredients are basically ghost chemicals that trick your brain.
- ISO E Super: The velvet blur — makes you smell like warm laundry
- Ambrette Seed: Synthetic musk that smells like actual clean skin
- Bergamot: The 10-minute citrus lie before it disappears
- Musk Blend: The reason people lean in and say “what are you wearing?”
Photo: Highlight ID / Unsplash
It lands like cold water — zero stickiness. Absorbs in 8 seconds flat. First sniff is sharp and almost sour. Give it 60 seconds. Then it turns into “did you just shower?”
By week two I realized: this isn’t a fragrance. It’s a vibe hack. I sprayed it on my pillow and woke up smelling like someone else had slept there. Unsettling. Hot.
Photo: the blowup / Unsplash
On fabric? Yes — I got three compliments from strangers in one grocery run. On skin? It’s a whisper at best. You’ll reapply. Accept it.
Photo: Edoardo Cuoghi / Unsplash
Missing Person is a mood, not a statement. Spray it on your clothes, stop blaming your wrists, and enjoy smelling like a memory.