Creamy malty sweet caramel with hints of vanilla and some cologne notes swirling around floral is my initial impact from the stick. A very engaging, modern, and commercial accord. I kinda like sweet, but this is perhaps a tad too sweet for my taste, and lacks enough balance for me. It's like a perfumed salted caramel. There's musk at the base, but that's sort of wrapped into the caramel. The florals are nice - quite clean, though here on the stick they are not quite strong enough to escape the caramel, and other than being sort of waxy white, are a little vague.
The scent on the burn of this Lila is quite gentle, and cleaner than most of the
Pondicherry incense I've tried, though I'm still getting a little of the roughness I generally experience from Pondicherry. I suspect the roughness I experience comes either from the use of
halmaddi as a fixative (and that potentially in Pondicherry they use more halmaddi than average, because I tend to get a stronger reaction to Pondicherry than most or nearly all other incenses) or it is due to the local tradition of using resin residue. Because I mainly perceive Pondicherry incense as rough rather more than irritating (which tends to be the case for me with too much halmaddi), and that it occurs across the range, including the original Heritage Cottage sticks, which were designed to be low cost incense for the local ashram than for sale to outsiders, and that the locals would be familiar with and like incense made with resin residue, I suspect that roughness is due to the
Tamil Nadu region tradition of using residue left from distilling resins such as benzoin rather than to any possible use of halmaddi.
On the burn I am picking up the scents which I noted on the stick, but as is common with incense mainly perfumed externally (rather than having the fragrance wrapped inside the paste), the scent on the stick is strong and attractive, while the scent on the burn tends to be fainter, and somewhat obscured and unbalanced by the burn notes from the combustible material and other ingredients.
I then take it for a walk around the house to give it some space and fresh air, and the base notes drop away, and I find that the scent I picked up on the stick comes more to the fore, though with more focus on floral notes. Nothing specific, more just a general sense of "floral". The caramel notes are less apparent now, though are still here. It is either a heady fragrance, or a heavy one. I'm inclined more to feeling it as heavy and a tad intrusive. I like it. Though it is a little too sweet, too floral, too feminine and unbalanced for my taste. But I do like it. Best burned at a far distance or with plenty of ventilation, or as a smudge around the house. The accord doesn't do much for me, but overall it's a decent scent.
The UK blurb is "sweet, powdery crisp patchouli, blended with earthy vetiver and green and mossy oak, with a little spice", while the USA blurb is "full of fresh Patchouli blended artistically with classic earthy Vetiver, traces of intoxicating Tuberose, soothing Benzoin, and green Oak Moss, crowned with a touch of spice to give it an oriental flavor". The US distributors mention tuberose and benzoin in the mix, which the UK distributor does not. The tuberose makes sense for the floral notes, and benzoin would possibly be in the mix as a fixative along with the oak moss, though none of these individual ingredients are standing out for me, especially not the patchouli. Sometimes the fragrant ingredient list can lead us astray. Sometimes we can get disappointed the scents are not there, while other times we look for and therefore find the scents we are told are there, rather than allow our individual relationship with the perfume or incense to develop. Looking at
the review on ORS, I see that they have found all the scents listed, though have an individual experience where they pick up chocolate. I can understand the chocolate note as that is not too far from my caramel note. Ah, initially I was applauding the reviewer (Mike?) for their individuality and nose, though I now note that they also say: "The informational material also calls chocolate as a note", so I assume they have read that the incense should have a chocolate note.
Anyway, this is supposed to be a patchouli incense, and I take that information lightly. I am at the point with incense where I much prefer to just burn it and experience it untainted with sales blurbs and descriptions. I always like to see what the sales pitch is, and what others have said about the incense, but I prefer to do that afterwards. And sometimes I'll see a new way into an incense. I find that Irene of
Rauchfahne has individual and knowledgeable things to say, and she has really informed and changed my way of approaching not just an individual incense now and again, but incense burning in general. I always like to look at what she has to say, and am disappointed when she hasn't reviewed something. And I like reading
Nathanupchurch.com, as he is a crafted and intelligent writer with unique and interesting approaches. Sadly he doesn't review incense that much.
Anyway, enough back-patting other bloggers, I like this incense. Decent and interesting fragrance accord, though held back for me by some of the ingredients, and the somewhat feminine, sweet, one-sided nature, which is not really my style.
Date: Sept 2025 Score: 30
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