/* eslint-disable */

// ── WARDROBE CARDS ────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
// 10 cards. Card 8 is Zoe (amber badge). All others: neutral editorial (Iris).
// Each href is a dead-link to the future L4 article slug.

const WARDROBE_CARDS = [
  {
    id: "three-layer-system",
    num: "01",
    topic: "LAYERING · THE FOUNDATION",
    title: "The Three-Layer System",
    titleEm: "base, mid, shell.",
    desc: "A merino base layer, a fleece mid-layer, and a packable rain shell handle anywhere from −5°C to 25°C. Add one warm hat and gloves and you've handled 0°C wind without packing a parka.",
    img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1551488831-00ddcb6c6bd3?w=1600&q=80",
    alt: "Folded merino base layers, fleece, and a packable shell on a wooden surface — the three-layer travel system.",
    count: "11 guides",
    read: "9 min core read",
    href: "/en/pack/climate-and-wardrobe/three-layer-system/",
    size: "lg",
    badge: null,
  },
  {
    id: "capsule-formula",
    num: "02",
    topic: "WARDROBE · THE FORMULA",
    title: "5-4-3-2-1",
    titleEm: "the capsule.",
    desc: "Five tops, four bottoms, three layers, two pairs of shoes, one jacket. Mix-and-match yields 12–15 distinct outfits. The whole wardrobe lives in one packing cube and weighs about 4–5 kg.",
    img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1441984904996-e0b6ba687e04?w=1600&q=80",
    alt: "A neatly laid-out travel capsule wardrobe showing coordinated neutrals and one accent piece.",
    count: "8 guides",
    read: "7 min core read",
    href: "/en/pack/climate-and-wardrobe/capsule-formula/",
    size: "md",
    badge: null,
  },
  {
    id: "two-pairs-of-shoes",
    num: "03",
    topic: "FOOTWEAR · THE RULE",
    title: "Two Pairs of Shoes",
    titleEm: "never three.",
    desc: "One walking shoe, broken in six weeks before the trip. One smart shoe for dinner. The third pair is the one you bring 'just in case' and never wear — it takes more space than any other single item in the bag.",
    img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1542291026-7eec264c27ff?w=1600&q=80",
    alt: "Two pairs of shoes — one clean white sneaker, one leather shoe — arranged on a wooden floor.",
    count: "5 guides",
    read: "6 min core read",
    href: "/en/pack/climate-and-wardrobe/two-pairs-of-shoes/",
    size: "md",
    badge: null,
  },
  {
    id: "multi-climate-packing",
    num: "04",
    topic: "LAYERING · MULTI-CLIMATE",
    title: "One Bag, Three Weather Zones",
    titleEm: "no parallel wardrobes.",
    desc: "Visiting Reykjavík and Lisbon in the same trip? Pack one layered wardrobe, not two. Strip in Lisbon, add in Reykjavík. The mistake is two parallel sets — one for each climate — and ending up with a bag that has neither version's full kit.",
    img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1529655683826-aba9b3e77383?w=1600&q=80",
    alt: "A traveler stepping from a cold mountain path into a sun-warmed city street — multi-climate in one trip.",
    count: "7 guides",
    read: "8 min core read",
    href: "/en/pack/climate-and-wardrobe/multi-climate-packing/",
    size: "lg",
    badge: null,
  },
  {
    id: "cold-weather-carry-on",
    num: "05",
    topic: "COLD WEATHER · NO CHECKED BAG",
    title: "Cold Weather Without a Checked Bag",
    titleEm: "wear the bulk.",
    desc: "The trick is your body. Wear the heaviest layer — the parka, the boots — on the plane. Once airborne, it's not in the bag anymore. A down jacket that compresses to a 1L stuff sack, a merino mid, a shell, and the capsule underneath gets you to −10°C and home on carry-on.",
    img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1478436127897-769e1b3f0f36?w=1600&q=80",
    alt: "A traveler in a heavy down coat at a snowy train platform — managing cold-weather carry-on travel.",
    count: "6 guides",
    read: "9 min core read",
    href: "/en/pack/climate-and-wardrobe/cold-weather-carry-on/",
    size: "md",
    badge: null,
  },
  {
    id: "hot-humid-fabrics",
    num: "06",
    topic: "HOT & HUMID · FABRIC SCIENCE",
    title: "Linen, Technical, and Why Cotton Fails",
    titleEm: "fabric choices matter.",
    desc: "Cotton holds sweat and takes a full day to dry in humid heat. Linen breathes and dries in an hour. Technical fabrics (nylon-blend, polyester-modal) wick fast and look fine at dinner. The fabric choice is the difference between arriving damp and arriving composed.",
    img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1506905925346-21bda4d32df4?w=1600&q=80",
    alt: "Loose linen and technical travel shirts laid flat in natural light — hot-weather fabric comparison.",
    count: "9 guides",
    read: "7 min core read",
    href: "/en/pack/climate-and-wardrobe/hot-humid-fabrics/",
    size: "md",
    badge: null,
  },
  {
    id: "shoulder-season-layering",
    num: "07",
    topic: "SHOULDER SEASON · RAINY DAYS",
    title: "Shoulder Season and the Rainy Layering Stack",
    titleEm: "the in-between months.",
    desc: "April in Paris. October in Japan. The weather changes three times before noon. A light merino, a packable down, and a waterproof shell (not 'water-resistant' — actually waterproof) handle everything. The umbrella stays in the room.",
    img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1496080174650-637e3f22fa03?w=1600&q=80",
    alt: "A traveler walking a cobblestone street in rain under a warm jacket — shoulder-season layering.",
    count: "6 guides",
    read: "6 min core read",
    href: "/en/pack/climate-and-wardrobe/shoulder-season-layering/",
    size: "md",
    badge: null,
  },
  {
    id: "zoe-four-season-lyon",
    num: "08",
    topic: "CONTRIBUTOR · ZOE MARCHETTI",
    title: "The Four-Season Lyon Wardrobe",
    titleEm: "twelve items, one year.",
    desc: "Zoe has lived out of the same twelve-piece wardrobe across Lyon's four seasons for eleven months. Merino base, one linen blazer, the dress she wears for everything, two shoes. She hasn't checked a bag since February.",
    img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1509631179647-0177331693ae?w=1600&q=80",
    alt: "A twelve-piece travel capsule wardrobe hanging and folded in a French apartment — Zoe's Lyon year.",
    count: "Zoe's column",
    read: "11 min read",
    href: "/journal/four-season-lyon-wardrobe/",
    size: "lg",
    badge: "ZOE · CONTRIBUTOR",
    isZoe: true,
  },
  {
    id: "merino-wool-magic",
    num: "09",
    topic: "FABRIC · MERINO WOOL",
    title: "Merino Wool and Why It's the Closest Thing to a Miracle",
    titleEm: "",
    desc: "Regulates temperature from 5°C to 25°C. Dries in under three hours. Doesn't smell for three to four wears. Comes out of a compression cube looking like you folded it. It costs more than cotton. It earns every cent.",
    img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1558618666-fcd25c85cd64?w=1600&q=80",
    alt: "Folded merino wool sweaters in natural earth tones — the travel fabric that does everything.",
    count: "8 guides",
    read: "8 min core read",
    href: "/en/pack/climate-and-wardrobe/merino-wool-magic/",
    size: "md",
    badge: null,
  },
  {
    id: "dress-codes-modest-formal",
    num: "10",
    topic: "DRESS CODES · CONTEXT DRESSING",
    title: "Modest Dress, Religious Sites, and Stretch Formalwear",
    titleEm: "dress for the room.",
    desc: "Religious sites, conservative cultures, beach weddings, and that one business dinner in Singapore. The answer is one convertible piece and one pair of trousers that travel without creasing. The 'just in case' blazer that looks like a blazer and not like something you packed for just in case.",
    img: "https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1485218126466-34e6392ec754?w=1600&q=80",
    alt: "A traveler in modest, elegant clothing entering a sunlit temple courtyard — dress codes on the road.",
    count: "7 guides",
    read: "8 min core read",
    href: "/en/pack/climate-and-wardrobe/dress-codes-modest-formal/",
    size: "md",
    badge: null,
  },
];

// ── ESSAY STATS ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
const WARDROBE_STATS = [
  { n: "5-4-3-2-1", l: "The formula for\na two-week wardrobe" },
  { n: "2", l: "Pairs of shoes\n(almost always enough)" },
  { n: "4–5 kg", l: "Full capsule\nincluding layers" },
  { n: "−30%", l: "Average weight saved\nby runners of the edit pass" },
];

// ── FAQ ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
const WARDROBE_FAQS = [
  {
    q: "What is the three-layer system and do I need all three layers?",
    a: "Base layer wicks moisture away from skin. Mid layer (fleece or down) traps heat. Shell blocks wind and rain. You only deploy all three in genuinely cold or wet conditions — in most trips you'll use two of the three most days and all three for one or two days. The value is that they combine and separate, so one wardrobe handles a wide temperature range without packing duplicate clothing.",
  },
  {
    q: "What's the 5-4-3-2-1 capsule and why does it work?",
    a: "Five tops, four bottoms, three layers, two pairs of shoes, one jacket. The mix-and-match math yields 12–15 distinct outfits from 14 pieces — enough for two weeks with one mid-trip wash. The formula forces edit discipline before you pack: each piece must work with at least three others in the set. If it doesn't, it doesn't earn its space.",
  },
  {
    q: "Why does cotton fail in hot and humid climates?",
    a: "Cotton absorbs moisture and holds it. In humid heat, a cotton shirt becomes damp within the first hour and takes 24–36 hours to dry fully. Linen absorbs about 20% less than cotton and dries in under two hours. Technical fabrics (nylon-modal, polyester-linen blends) wick and dry in 45–90 minutes. The fabric choice determines whether you arrive at dinner composed or damp.",
  },
  {
    q: "How do I pack for a multi-climate trip without doubling my wardrobe?",
    a: "Layer, don't duplicate. A merino base, a fleece mid, and a packable shell cover anywhere from −5°C to 25°C. Wear the heaviest piece on the plane — it's not in the bag then. Strip layers in the warm leg, add them in the cold leg. The mistake is packing two parallel sets — one warm wardrobe and one tropical wardrobe — and ending up with a bag that has neither set fully covered.",
  },
  {
    q: "What's the one dress code item I should always pack?",
    a: "A pair of tailored, non-wrinkle trousers in a neutral — navy, stone, charcoal. They'll handle a religious site, a business dinner, a beach wedding (depending on the cut), and 90% of situations where denim or shorts won't do. Add a linen or cotton-blend button-down that packs flat and you've covered almost every context you'll face. The 'just in case' blazer: only if you know you'll need it. Otherwise, leave it.",
  },
  {
    q: "Are merino wool clothes really worth the price premium over synthetics?",
    a: "For travel, yes — more than for any other use case. Merino's case rests on three things synthetics don't match: odor resistance (genuinely four wears without smell vs. two for polyester), temperature regulation in a wide range (5°C to 25°C in a single weight), and the way it compresses and recovers without permanent crease. If you wear it on three-quarters of your travel days, the cost-per-wear beats a cheaper alternative within one trip.",
  },
  {
    q: "When is it acceptable to bring a third pair of shoes?",
    a: "When you know exactly which occasion requires them and that occasion is definitely on this trip. A destination wedding: bring formal shoes. An organized trek that requires specific boots and your hotel situation requires clean shoes at dinner: bring three. In every other case, the third pair is the one you bring 'just in case' and never wear — it takes more bag volume than any single garment.",
  },
];

// ── READING LIST ──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
const WARDROBE_READING = [
  { title: "The Case for Merino: Why the Premium Pays Off on the Road", tag: "Fabric", duration: "8 min read" },
  { title: "How to Pack Two Temperature Zones Without Two Wardrobes", tag: "Method", duration: "9 min read" },
  { title: "The Edit Pass: How to Remove a Third of What You've Laid Out", tag: "System", duration: "6 min read" },
  { title: "Modest Dress on the Road: What to Bring, What to Leave", tag: "Context", duration: "7 min read" },
  { title: "Why the Third Pair of Shoes Is Almost Always a Mistake", tag: "Footwear", duration: "5 min read" },
  { title: "Shoulder Season Packing: The Stack That Handles Everything", tag: "Seasonal", duration: "6 min read" },
];

Object.assign(window, {
  WARDROBE_CARDS,
  WARDROBE_STATS,
  WARDROBE_FAQS,
  WARDROBE_READING,
});
