
12 Best Phlur Perfumes of All Time, Tested and Reviewed for 2025
With each launch, Phlur seems to spark a flurry of conversation: from Strawberry Letter, which helped reignite our obsession with fruity perfumes, to Vanilla Skin, which seems to be the internet's favorite body mist. The brand's fragrances span nearly every category, including delicate florals, sunny citruses, smokey woods, and beyond—so there's something to please every perfume palate. Best of all, every single scent is under $100, with body mists starting at $25 (our wallets are shaking).
Not sure where to start? Don't sweat: our editors smell-tested Phlur's entire scent collection. After many spritzes, these are the 12 Phlur perfumes that are worth the hype.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CBS News
19 hours ago
- CBS News
Book excerpt: "The Slip" by Lucas Schaefer
We may receive an affiliate commission from anything you buy from this article. Lucas Schaefer's debut comic novel, "The Slip," set in and around a boxing gym in Austin, Texas, pounces on issues of race, sex and gender identity in America today, as a long-dormant missing-person's case comes back to life. Read an excerpt below. "The Slip" by Lucas Schaefer Prefer to listen? Audible has a 30-day free trial available right now. The morning after Ed Hooley saw a coyote in the supply closet, Bob Alexander declared something smelled rotten inside Terry Tucker's Boxing Gym. This was at six a.m. on a Tuesday, midway through abs and stretching. Inside the ring, the eleven members of the First Thing crew sprawled out on foam mats as Terry Tucker, fifty-four, led them through an arduous medley of scissor kicks and side-to-sides, knees-to-your-ears and upside-down bicycle. It was August in Austin, the average age inside the ring was forty-nine, and though it would be hours before a single speck of perspiration would appear on Terry's left temple, his charges were sopping. Sopping except for Bob Alexander. Bob was lanky and spry, a semi-affable curmudgeon. At sixty-eight, he was the oldest of the First Thingers and among the fittest, too, though on this morning he was only going through the motions. Preoccupying Bob was the anonymous note that had been placed under the windshield wiper of his Audi sometime the night before. It had been a decade since his nephew had disappeared, and things like this still happened on occasion. A lead to nowhere, a tip to nothing. A psychic in New Braunfels who'd experienced a vision. "Sounds promising," Bob had told the detective who'd called with that gem. A few days before, a short article on the tenth anniversary of the disappearance had run in the Statesman, so of course the kooks and grifters were coming out of the woodwork now. No one had ever shown up at his house before, though, and it was this, combined with the note's puzzling content, which meant that as soon as Bob left the gym, he would take the folded paper, stowed in his glove compartment, to Austin Police headquarters, a time-suck in building form, where, if he had to guess, he'd rehash the story of his missing nephew, Nathaniel Rothstein, without coming any closer to finding him. From "The Slip" by Lucas Schaefer. Copyright © 2025 by Lucas Schaefer. Excerpted with permission by Simon & Schuster, a division of Simon & Schuster, Inc. Get the book here: "The Slip" by Lucas Schaefer Buy locally from For more info:
Yahoo
4 days ago
- Yahoo
Amy Bradley Went Missing on a Cruise Ship. The True Story & Top Theories
It was March 23, 1998, and Amy Lynn Bradley was vacationing on a Royal Caribbean cruise ship with her family. Rhapsody of the Seas was sailing "somewhere between Aruba and Curacao, Netherlands Antilles." The FBI page devoted to Bradley's story gives the following account. According to Special Agent Erin Sheridan, Amy and her brother Brad Bradley "had a night out." Her parents, Ron and Iva Bradley, were also on the cruise ship. She was a "talented basketball player and college graduate," just 23 years old. "So that evening, Amy was out at the disco with her brother, other passengers, and crew, socializing and having a great time. In the morning, when her parents and her brother woke, Amy was gone," Sheridan says on the website, noting that her brother, Brad, was the last person to see her. Where is Amy Bradley now? Is she dead, under duress, the victim of human trafficking, or did she leave on her own? Did she fall overboard, or was she murdered? A new Netflix documentary, Amy Bradley Is Missing, revisits the story of the missing woman. That has a lot of people wondering about the true story, as well as the top theories in the case. There's a $25,000 reward in the case, according to the FBI. "Myself and my parents have had to endure a lot of sadness, but the last thing that I ever said to Amy was, 'I love you,' before I went to sleep that night. Knowing that that's the last thing I said to her has always been very comforting to me," Brad Bradley says on the FBI page. According to the FBI, Amy has "several tattoos, including a sun, a gecko lizard, and a Tasmanian devil spinning a basketball." "On Saturday, March 21, 1998, the vessel departed San Juan, Puerto Rico, and traveled to its first port of call, the island of Aruba," the FBI explained."On Monday, March 23, 1998, Rhapsody of the Seas departed Aruba and was traveling in international waters to its next island port of Curacao, Netherlands Antilles. During the early morning hours of Tuesday," it says. "March 24, 1998, Amy Lynn Bradley went missing. The vessel later departed Curacao and continued on to the island of St. Martin (Sint Maarten) and further traveled to St. Thomas, United States Virgin Islands, before returning to San Juan, Puerto Rico, on Saturday, March 28, 1998." According to TODAY, Bradley was "last seen asleep on her chair on the balcony of the ship's eighth deck at 4:30 a.m." She has never been seen by her loved ones again, and it's not clear whether she is dead or alive. "I'm telling you, if she came off the ship or fell off the ship, we would get a body,' Adtzere 'John' Mentar, who was Harbor police chief at the time, said on the Netflix show. 'She would have washed ashore …' The series also shows Sheridan explaining the family's cabin was cleaned before investigators could search it, one of the challenges of investigating a crime on a cruise ship. The series entertains various theories about Bradley's disappearance. One woman interviewed, Lori Thompson, "claims she saw Amy with Alister 'Yellow' Douglas, an entertainer on the ship, shortly before Amy vanished," Netflix writes. "Earlier that night, Douglas had been seen dancing with Amy in the nightclub, a detail backed by video footage." The series also does not rule out the possibility that Bradley fell or jumped overboard. The series also explores the claim that Bradley might have been human trafficked. US Navy seaman Bill Hefner "believes he met a distressed Amy in a bar after his ship arrived in Curaçao in January 1999, 10 months after she went missing," Netflix reports, adding that another theory has Bradley vanishing on her own, buttressed by a "pattern" of logins to the family's missing person website on key dates from IP addresses in Barbados. According to Netflix, Douglas took a polygraph test, but it was inconclusive; he says he's innocent, and he's never been accused by authorities of any wrongdoing in connection with Bradley's disappearance. Various people have claimed they saw Bradley since she vanished, but none of those claims has been authenticated, USA Today reported. . Another twist in the case came in 2005, when an "anonymous source allegedly sent the Bradleys photos of a woman whom they claimed was Amy that they found online," People reported. Despite differences in the woman's appearance, Iva Bradley "believed it could have been her daughter," according to People, which reported the photos came from "an adult website based in the Caribbean." There was never enough evidence to trace the photo's origin or the woman. A Coast Guard lieutenant initially said that authorities believed she fell from the balcony in the family's room on the 8th deck into the water, according to a 1998 Associated Press article. One tantalizing clue: The door to that balcony was open, the AP reported. Her uncle John Noblin said in that article that the family didn't think Bradley fell overboard because she was afraid of heights and would have been cautious around the railing. Noblin said at that time that he believed someone had "grabbed" Bradley in the corridor. FBI agents searched the ship to no avail, and her flyer was distributed in nearby ports. Bradley was a "trained lifeguard," that story says, adding that authorities found no evidence of foul play on the Bradley Went Missing on a Cruise Ship. The True Story & Top Theories first appeared on Men's Journal on Jul 16, 2025

Refinery29
01-07-2025
- Refinery29
10 Hair Perfumes That Cost Less Than The EDPs — & Last Just As Long
All linked products are independently selected by our editors. If you purchase any of these products, we may earn a commission. If you're in the habit of spritzing perfume on your wrists, you're missing out on a key piece of real estate: your hair. As a fragrance-obsessed editor, I find hair perfumes to be a vastly underrated category. They come at a snip of the price of eaux de parfum — which typically feature a higher fragrance oil concentration — making them a low-commitment way to trial a new signature scent and a great option for gifting. Unlike traditional perfumes, hair perfumes typically contain little to no alcohol and instead boast moisturizing, shine-enhancing ingredients that help nourish rather than dry out your ends. Standing at just 5 ft tall, I've come to learn that my hair often makes the first impression when I talk to taller people. Having hair that smells amazing feels like a small but meaningful way to make a good first impression. I personally find that my hair holds on to scent molecules longer than my skin does, especially in the summer when I'm sweating a lot in the heat. Not only are hair perfumes great for scent layering, but they also leave a lovely trail when I move around. Ahead, I've rounded up a list of hair perfumes I'll always keep on my beauty shelf. This intensely feminine hair mist is by far my most complimented perfume. I always get told that I 'smell so expensive' when I hug someone while wearing this scent. Bulgarian rose, bergamot, jasmine, and pink pepper form the basis of this sensual and spicy floral scent, which lingers on my hair for hours and has incredible projection. I'd say that because of how heady the rose heart notes are, it's more suitable for nighttime wear. Ellis Brooklyn Peaches Hair and Body Fragrance Mist, $48 $36 Peaches is the hair perfume equivalent of a refreshing cocktail on an unbearably hot and sticky afternoon. It has a candy-like initial blast, but the dry down is surprisingly photorealistic: juicy peach notes smell exactly like the actual fruit, while orris and ambrette musk bring a skin-like intimacy that reminds me of peach fuzz. It's an ideal beach perfume that feels carefree and flirty, without being too much. Diptyque Do Son Hair Mist, $76 Do Son needs no introduction. This gorgeous white floral scent is a classic for good reason: it has a linear scent profile that's equal parts elegant and distinctive, thanks to intoxicating tuberose, gardenia and orange blossom. The hair mist version is heavily slept on, in my opinion: the hit of tuberose is just as potent, and the packaging is equally beautiful as the full-size eau de parfum. Phlur Vanilla Smoke Body & Hair Mist, $25 Vanilla Smoke marks an interesting deviation from the sweet gourmand perfumes that Phlur has helped popularize in the last couple of years. The scent is still anchored by warm and comforting vanilla, but smoky incense and sappy birch are here to inject depth and personality. The result is a woody, spicy aroma that almost smells like a burning vanilla candle. It's so unique and elevated, especially considering the $25 price tag. Chanel Coco Mademoiselle Hair Perfume, $82 I reach for this crowd-pleaser of a scent when I need to impress. The bergamot, mandarin, and orange top notes lift my mood at first spray, and as the scent dries down, my nose is hit with an exquisite concoction of rose, jasmine, and ylang ylang. I love catching whiffs of this every time I move my head, and it helps me feel more self-assured. I'm glad that Chanel has retained its chic glass bottle and square cap, as many luxury brands package hair perfumes in a plain-looking aerosol bottle. Gisou Lavender Berry Honey Infused Hair Perfume, $25 Gisou's hair perfumes are my go-to for when I'm getting ready for bed. There's something about making my hair smell like delicious honey that helps calm my thoughts, not to mention nourish the hair and boost shine. I carry the mini version of the lavender and blackberry scent on my travels; I'm convinced it helps me fall asleep faster. If you can't get enough of clean, musky perfumes, this Byredo classic is the one. There's a reason Mojave Ghost is enduringly popular: it envelopes you in a cloud of magnolia, cedar, and musk that smells so alluring on freshly-showered hair. I like spraying this liberally onto my paddle brush and pulling it through my hair. Le Monde Gourmand Lait De Coco Hair & Body Mist, $28 It doesn't get any more summery than this coconut-based scent. I'm normally not a fan of sweet gourmand perfumes, but here the combination of coconut, vanilla praline, and bergamot really works to create something that smells delicious and inviting without coming off as cloying or juvenile. Parfums De Marly Delina Hair Mist, $93 Delina is an all-time R29 editor favorite; we can't get enough of this sweet-yet-sophisticated fragrance, which greets the nose with a buoyant cocktail of lychee, peonies, rose, and rhubarb. I'm very happy to report that this fruity floral scent hits just as hard in hair perfume format. In fact, the creamy vanilla and cashmeran base notes smell more prominent on the hair. This is a great one to pop in the purse for fun summer plans, from festivals to picnics and garden parties. Ruka Hair Perfume, $35 Shop This I spritz this scent in place of a leave-in conditioner or hair oil when the weather gets too hot. It contains mongongo oil, an ingredient from Zambia that is rich in nourishing vitamin E and omega-6. There's also aloe vera, which prevents breakage. My hair immediately feels softer after using this, and the refreshing coconut and musk scent is simply gorgeous.