Incense In The Wind

Burner Burner - Carhartt jacket incense burner

Thursday, 12 March 2026

"True Vrindavan" from The Incense Atelier

"True Vrindavan"

Julian of Incense Atelier has imported a selection of sticks into the UK from an outlet in Vrindavan who have a two generation heritage of incense making, which Julian is selling as "True Vrindavan". It is possible that some of these sticks are the ones sold by places such as Vrindavan BazaarHare Krishna Das, and Rasbihari Lal & Sons, though there's no direct evidence. I have been researching Vrindavan for a while as I'll be visiting there in November this year (2026),  so I was able to identify the outlet; but out of respect for Julian I'm not revealing the source, not even privately. 


Reviews


The Incense Atelier "True Vrindavan"
Shahi Chandan
 (M)
Mar 2026 - Score: 44
 

The Incense Atelier "True Vrindavan"
Shahi Agar
 (M)
Mar 2026 - Score: 42
  

The Incense Atelier "True Vrindavan"
Surabhi
 (M)
 Mar 2026 - Score: 42
  

The Incense Atelier "True Vrindavan"
Ruh Kesar
 (M)
Mar 2026 - Score: 40
  

The Incense Atelier "True Vrindavan"
Ruh Kasturi
 (M)
Mar 2026 - Score: 36
   

The Incense Atelier "True Vrindavan"
Lotus
 (M)
Mar 2026 - Score: 33
  

Reviews: 6
High score: 44
Low Score: 33
Average: 40

*** 




The Incense Atelier "True Vrindavan" Shahi Chandan



Julian of Incense Atelier has imported a selection of sticks into the UK from an outlet in Vrindavan who have a two generation heritage of incense making, which Julian is selling as "True Vrindavan". It is possible that some of these sticks are the ones sold by places such as Vrindavan BazaarHare Krishna Das, and Rasbihari Lal & Sons, though there's no direct evidence. I have been researching Vrindavan for a while as I'll be visiting there in November this year (2026),  so I was able to identify the outlet; but out of respect for Julian I'm not revealing the source, not even privately. 

Shahi Chandan means "Royal Sandalwood" as in Vinason's Royal Sandalwood and Manohar's Royal Sandal, two excellent examples from Pune; and the scent on the stick is rich with resinous, woody, musky sandalwood - dark and hearty. Not the pale wimpy sandalwood scent often found in Asian incense where true sandalwood has been used, but in order to keep down costs the cheaper, unscented parts of the wood have been used. This is heart swooning sexy sandalwood derived from a blending of aroma chemicals and plant substitutes - skilfully marrying ancient and modern traditions to get at the true and royal essence of the beauty of dark sandalwood oil. 

The scent on the burn is a little more complex and unclear than the cold throw scent on the stick. It takes longer than usual to settle. There's often a few moments after lighting an incense stick where the scent is more about the burning bamboo, binder, and combustibles, until the heat from the smouldering ember is able to bring the fragrances alive. That moment lasts a little while here, and some off notes such as burning plastic are thrown out. This is an oil rich stick, so is more smoky than the other sticks from this Vrindavan house. This needs more space and ventilation than the average. When the right space and air has been found, the stick produces a fertile, earthy, musty and musky wood scent. This is both comforting and challenging. Grounding, solid, stoic, enveloping, intense, with a sweeping sense of "incense"; yet also warming, glowing with passion, rising to honeyed tweaks with vague floral notes of jasmine and rose. 

This is a deep, intense, hugely rich and sandalwood, such as you'd want a royal incense to be. Bloody gorgeous. 

Available from The Incense Atelier at £3.45 for 10gms (plus shipping). A handy good value sampler of 2 sticks of each of the seven scents is available for £4.45 (plus shipping). 


Date: March 2026    Score: 44
***



The Incense Atelier "True Vrindavan" Shahi Agar



Julian of Incense Atelier has imported a selection of sticks from an outlet in Vrindavan who have a heritage of incense making in Vrindavan, which Julian is selling as "True Vrindavan". 

Shahi Agar ("Royal Agarwood/Oud") is a vigorous Arabian oud style stick, vibrant and rich with smoky, leathery, old, woods and florals with a glowing amber warmth. There's a lot going on here - some delightful aged rose petals soaked in oil, the merest frosty hint of diamond aldehydes, creamy wood, and sparkles of clove and cinnamon spices. I do like an oud - it's my sort of thing, so I'm naturally going to favour something like this over a mono-scented and somewhat linear floral scent like Lotus. While another person might have their preference the other way round. Each to their own. Me, I love oud! 

The scent on the burn is resinous, rough, woody, and oudy - my sort of scent. I do love this. Yummy.    

Available from The Incense Atelier at £2.45 for 10gms (plus shipping). A handy good value sampler of 2 sticks of each of the seven scents is available for £4.45 (plus shipping). 


Date: March 2026    Score: 42
***



The Incense Atelier "True Vrindavan" Surabhi



Julian of Incense Atelier has imported a selection of sticks from an outlet in Vrindavan who have a heritage of incense making in Vrindavan, which Julian is selling as "True Vrindavan".

Surabhi is a delightful incense with warm spicy Oriental tones and fresh herbal characteristics on the stick - it feels quite fresh, gourmand, and natural. There are elements of Persian attars and ouds, along with a subtle chewy sweetness with clove and licorice notes.  It's quite woody and outdoorsy, with little sparks of clove and/or cinnamon. It reminds me of a chewing gum in the mid 70s which might have been Big Red. I love this. 

The scent on the burn is quite dreamy - a little more smooth and perfumed than the rather rougher and more interesting cold throw scent on the stick, but with a delicate saffron influenced fragrance. It is clean, refreshing, gentle, almost feminine. It is an appropriate incense for Vrindavan as it does feel somewhat divine. Yes, I love this. 

Available from The Incense Atelier at £2.45 for 10gms (plus shipping). A handy good value sampler of 2 sticks of each of the seven scents is available for £4.45 (plus shipping). 


Date: March 2026    Score: 42
***


The Incense Atelier "True Vrindavan" Ruh Kasturi

 


Julian of Incense Atelier has imported a selection of sticks from an outlet in Vrindavan who have a heritage of incense making in Vrindavan, which Julian is selling as "True Vrindavan", and is keeping the name of the outlet to himself.

Ruh Kasturi is the spirit or essence of deer musk, though in reality the scent comes from aroma chemicals, which has been the standard in Indian incense for many years, though some makers will use plant alternatives, such as the musk mallow. The sticks are a charcoal-based paste hand-rolled onto hand-cut bamboo splints with a faint orange dye. The paste has a light covering of melnoorva/masala powder more in the Pune style than Bangalore. The scent on the stick is cool and perfumed, inclining more to white musk than regular musk

The scent on the burn is gentle and pleasant with musk elements - though with that clean element of white musk, leaning in toward fresh linen. It's an attractive room freshener. Gently sweet and likeable; quite safe in the scent profile - there's nothing adventurous, unexpected, or interesting here - it just delivers a quiet, pleasant, and musk tinged fragrance

Available from The Incense Atelier at £3.10 for 10gms (plus shipping). A handy good value sampler of 2 sticks of each of the seven scents is available for £4.45 (plus shipping). 


Date: March 2026    Score: 36
***


Musk

The Incense Atelier "True Vrindavan" Ruh Kesar

 


Julian of Incense Atelier has imported into the UK a selection of sticks from an outlet in the sacred city of  Vrindavan which has a two generation heritage of incense making in Vrindavan, which Julian is selling as "True Vrindavan", and is keeping the name of the outlet to himself. I'll be honest and say that I've been studying Vrindavan for a while (I'll be visiting there in November this year) so I was able to identify the outlet; but out of respect for Julian I'm not revealing the source, not even privately. 

Ruh Kesar means spirit of saffron. Saffron grows in North India - principally Pampore in Kashmir, and though it is a popular scent in Indian incense, real saffron isn't used as it is too expensive. Saffron fragrance oils such as those supplied by VedaOils, or a synthetic such as Safranal, are what tends to be used. When creating an incense with a saffron scent, it is generally blended with another scent, most commonly sandalwood. I think the only other mono-scented saffron incense I've had has been Goloka Saffron, which was reasonably pleasant, though with little awareness of the saffron fragrance. On the whole I tend to prefer the saffron-sandalwood blends. 

The stick is attractive looking with a saffron coloured finishing powder. The scent on the stick is deliciously spicy with distinct clove elements, which I've noted before in Indian saffron incenses, and is likely from something like eugenol oil, possibly used to give the spicy and medicinal notes of saffron. It is fresh and cleansing and quite compelling - there are neat little apple and floral notes along with a creamy sandalwood base. Yes, I like this. 

The scent on the burn replicates that on the stick. It is warm, and - considering the tangy nature of the clove fragrance - quite gentle and soothing. A soft woody base (quite clean, though with some leafy earthiness) wraps and holds the saffron-like and spicy clove notes in a comforting embrace. A brilliant meditation incense, this is physically calming yet mentally stimulating. Yes. Nice one. I like this a lot. 

Available from The Incense Atelier at £2.45 for 10gms (plus shipping).


Date: March 2026    Score: 40 
***


The Incense Atelier "True Vrindavan" Lotus

 

Julian of Incense Atelier has found an outlet in Vrindavan who have a heritage of incense making, and are today trading incense made by themselves in Vrindavan, which Julian is selling as "True Vrindavan". I've asked Julian not to tell me the source as I don't want to accidently reveal it, so there is no point in writing to me privately asking for the source. I genuinely haven't been told.

The lotus is an auspicious flower, so is a popular scent especially in sacred spiritual centres like Vrindavan where Krishna played as a child. The aim of the incense maker would likely be to create  something soft and divine - something sweet, floral, and relaxing. 

The sticks are a wood and charcoal paste hand rolled onto dyed red bamboo splints, and the paste then covered  in a melnoorva/masala finishing powder. There's an average of 7 inches of paste on a 9 inch stick. The sticks present more like the Bangalore style than the Pune or Pondicherry styles. The scent is floral and waxy, and while there is some sweetness, there is also some mild spice and a marine freshness I was not expecting. There is a curious gourmand character with some interesting sour milk and citrus notes. And there's some light touches of stone fruit - cherry, apricot, faint plum, and even a hint of olives. Interesting and attractive. 

The scent on the burn is delightful - a powdery, gentle waxy floral - clean linen, fresh but mild strawberry, touches of rose and jasmine, and then the sandalwood joins in. A wonderful match up. This is a delicate and beautiful fragrance - somewhat feminine, but without being girly. The soft, sweet sandalwood grounds the florals to prevent the accord from becoming fey. It does lean a little too much into sweet, floral jam for my taste, but the gentle sandalwood notes do add a balance.  

Available from The Incense Atelier at £2.60 for 10gms (plus shipping) in Incense Atelier packaging. 


Date: March 2026    Score: 33
***

Lotus



Wednesday, 4 March 2026

Jeomra's Raeucherwelt (Incense World)

 

Georg Huber (Jeomra) runs an online incense shop, Raeucherwelt.de ("Incense World"), specialising in pure frankincense, and since 2022 has been making incense in Germany with an incense machine he ordered from India. I'm excited at what he is doing, and while the results, for me, are a little inconsistent - at their best, such as with Natur Pur Weihrauch Rose, they are awesome. 

I find what Huber is doing fascinating, along the same lines as what Benyamin Shoham is doing with Seraphim Incense in Israel, and particularly what Pure Yemen are doing in Yemen  - creating modern incense sticks using pure ingredients in countries which do not yet have a tradition or culture of incense sticks. This is exciting, bold, ground-breaking incense making, and they deserve respect and support.



Reviews


  

Jeomra’s Raucher Stabchen Hojari  (M)
Feb 2025 - Score: 35


Jeomra's Stabchen Natur Pur Amber (RS)
Dec 2025 - Score: 27

Reviews: 4
High score: 50
Low score: 27
Average: 35

***



Tuesday, 3 March 2026

Jeomra’s Raucher Stabchen Natur & Duft Nag Champa Surya

 


Georg Huber (Jeomra) runs an online incense shop, Raeucherwelt.de ("Incense World"), specialising in pure frankincense, and since 2022 has been making incense in Germany with an incense machine he ordered from India. I'm excited at what he is doing, and while the results, for me, are a little inconsistent - at their best, such as with Natur Pur Weihrauch Rose, they are awesome. 

This Nag Champa comes from Jeomra's Natur & Duft ("Nature & Fragrance") range, indicating, unlike the Natur Pur range, that the scent accord comes from a blend of natural and synthetic fragrances. Which seems to fit in with what we know about Satya Nag Champa - I've been having a discussion about this issue on Reddit. A mass spectrum analysis of Satya Nag Champa indicates that it is mostly natural, but uses one synthetic aroma - 4-tert-butylcyclohexyl acetate, which is sold under trade names such as Vertenex and Lorysia; so it seems appropriate that Huber is also using a blend of natural and synthetic. 

The cold throw scent on the stick is sweet and floral with a tendency to veer toward rose and jasmine, with some cold mineral elements close to talc and chalk, and a hint of White Musk, with a tickle of vanilla. It's clean and charming, though lacking in the warmth and beauty of the Nag Champas I mostly like, especially Satya's, which I find adorable on the stick. 

The hot throw scent on the burn is more smoky and harsh than I was expecting. This is a stick that I need to place quite a distance away. Given more space and air it becomes more polite and gentle. The wood scent, however, remains too dry for my taste. Tastes differ - I know many folks enjoy the dry quality of Pondicherry and Tibetan incense, while I am not fond of them. There is a certain natural feel about the wood notes, though it's the natural feel of dried plants burning - it's just a little too rugged and lacking in sweetness for my taste. There are some top floral notes which I find more cheerful and acceptable than the base wood notes, with sparkles of vanilla which lighten the load, but they are somewhat dwarfed by the severity of the woods. 

I've not really engaged with this stick. It's a curiously sombre take on the usually quite sweet and dreamy Nag Champa scent accord. This is less commercial, less accessible, and more serious. There will be people who like it - especially those who enjoy Tibetan and Pondicherry incense, but it's not for me, and I can't see it having a wide commercial appeal. It doesn't feel as though it has been put together to appeal to the masses. And it doesn't feel as though it has been put together to appeal to those who like Nag Champa. It's an individual construct around the idea of Nag Champa, though perhaps deconstruct might be a more appropriate description. If it was more to my taste I would spend more time to unravel the scents, but it has not reached out to me, and indeed at times pushed me away. 

The description on the website says: "For Surya Champa, we use the fragrance base typical of all traditional Indian Champa recipes, consisting of Halmaddi resin, honey and sandalwood, and add a blend of the finest, pure essential oils as well as safe fragrance oils to create a heavy, intense and captivating floral scent...Surya Nag Champa is a typical temple fragrance and spreads a meditative yet cheerful atmosphere in your living spaces."

Ingredients: "Balloon Dust, sandalwood from Indonesia, beechwood charcoal from Germany, Halmaddi from India, Joss powder from Vietnam, Loban powder from India, forest honey from Germany, sandalwood essential oil, patchouli essential oil, vanillin, nature-identical oils, perfume". 

There is a comma in the translation between "Balloon Dust" and "sandalwood from Indonesia", though I don't think there should be - I think it should read "Balloon dust sandalwood from Indonesia". Balloon dust sandalwood is very fine powder gathered in bags when cutting sandalwood with machine saws. There is also sandalwood oil in the mix, which suggests that the wood dust is not fragrant enough by itself - I assume the sandalwood dust is mainly used as the combustible. It does have an element of Chinese incense about the scent, and they tend to use powdered sandalwood as the main combustible source. I think the bulk of the scent I'm getting is from the wood dust. I think the other fragrance ingredients are less noticeable to me because my olfactory attention has been caught and held by the wood powder aroma. 

While this has not been exactly to my taste, I find what Huber is doing fascinating, along the same lines as what Benyamin Shoham is doing with Seraphim Incense in Israel, and particularly what Pure Yemen are doing in Yemen  - creating modern incense sticks using pure ingredients in countries which do not yet have a tradition or culture of incense sticks. This is exciting, bold, ground-breaking incense making, and they deserve respect and support. Available from Raeucherwelt.de at €12.90 for 10 sticks


Date: Mar 2026   Score: 28
***



Saturday, 28 February 2026

Om Sai Om Brand Trishala Patchouli Dhoop Sticks

 


The Trishala range by Om Sai (Om Brand) of Mumbai are low cost everyday room freshener perfumed sticks and dhoops. Decent value for money for modest but bright and professional machine-made incense sticks. The scents are all pleasant with nothing that is ugly, but also nothing which stands out as more than a basic room freshener. The name comes from Trishala,  the mother of Mahavira,  a Supreme Preacher in Jain religion - it would suggest purity, auspiciousness, and tradition for Indians. The patchouli is the fragrance I have most enjoyed in the range when I reviewed it in joss stick format: Trishala Patchouli

I've not enjoyed these Trishala Patchouli dhoop sticks as much as I enjoyed the Patchouli joss sticks. These present a little too much as slick, clean modern synthetic perfume. There is little character here, and little in common with regular patchouli scents. These leans a little too much toward White Musk style synthetics. Too clean, too well behaved. It's a pleasant scent, but not really for me, especially as dhoop tends to be smokier and heavier than joss sticks. 

Available for 55 Rupees (India only) direct from Om Sai Om Brand


Date: Feb 2026   Score:  28/50

White Musk - the clean synthetic

 


White Musk is a hugely popular synthetic scent, much used in clothes conditioners, pefumes and incenses. The first fully synthetic scents were the original nitro musks developed by Albert Baur in 1888,  though these were problematic due to health concerns, so were replaced in the mid 20th century by cleaner, safer polycyclic musks, such as white musk. These modern musks  are today widely used in perfumery. White musk is pleasantly clean, powdery, and fresh with a scent like freshly washed bed sheets.  It is musk with the sexy, animalistic parts removed. 


Reviews



Three Lotus / Himalayan Flower White Musk 
Nov 2024 - Score: 23


Stamford White Musk (P)
May 2025 = Score: 22


Feb 2026 - Score: 22=


HEM White Musk cones (P)
May 2018 - Score: 20*


Nikhil's Nature's Blessing White Musk (P)
Feb 2024 - Score: 18


Emporium Mystic Scents White Musk (P)
May 2019 - Score: 
18


Reviews: 7
Top score: 28
Low score: 18
Average: 22


Manohar Royal Sandal

 


Royal, like Durbar, Mahal, and Gold, is a term used to suggest richness and opulence, and that term is certainly appropriate here. I have reviewed over 80 different sandalwood incenses from the sublime to the ridiculous, and, as far as Indian single scent sandalwood incense sticks or cones or dhoops go, this is one of the most sublime. A tasty blend of natural and modern oils to balance and bring out the best in the concept of what a sandalwood scent should be. 

The clues are in the cold throw scent on the stick - clean linen and scintillating diamonds indicate modern aldehydes to smooth out the rougher, richer, more earthy and abrasive tones of the natural oils. The accord is awesome - it feels well designed and balanced. The hot throw scent on the burn brings depth and an exciting natural feel, and this is where the earthy, woody notes make themselves known. 

On a personal level I'd like more sweetness, more wetness, more darkness, musk, and sex appeal, but these are personal quibbles, this is a beautiful and alluring sandalwood - very Royal indeed. 

Manohar incenses are available outside India from The Incense Atelier at prices from £1.75 to £2.75 for 10g plus shipping. There's also a very useful sample pack of 10 different fragrances (2 sticks each) for £3.95 plus postage.  


Date: Feb 2026   Score: 41/50
***