Incense In The Wind

Burner Burner - Carhartt jacket incense burner

Sunday, 31 December 2017

Backflow cones from China




Readers please note that backflow cones look attractive, and you might want to try one, but they do leave an unpleasant smell afterwards, the smoke will stain surrounding furniture, so take care where you are burning them, the burners are difficult and unpleasant to clean (use gloves!), and there are health concerns because of the amount of tar they produce.


I've seen videos of backflow cones on YouTube, and they look great, so I bought a backflow burner, and some cones. I bought the cones on Amazon from a dealer called Gemini_mall for around £2 including delivery I get a pack from China of 50 coloured pieces which do exactly what they are supposed to do. They look great, and I made my own video.




The only problem is that they are pressed sawdust dipped in some really shitty chemical perfume. Whatever colour the cone, the scent is really bad. And, as it flows downward and goes over the furniture it stains it - so be careful of where you use these backflow cones, and make sure you rest them on something to protect the surface below.

I wondered for a while how the smoke flows down rather than up, so I searched around and found the answer. The cone has a hollow tube - as the cone burns the smoke comes out at the top (as normal) and - as the burning reaches the hollow tube inside the cone, the smoke goes into that as well. When the smoke is in the hollow tube it is below the heat source, so starts to cool. When it reaches ambient room temperature it starts to fall because smoke is heavier than air at ambient temperature because it contains dense particles. It then falls out of the hole at the bottom of the cone and through the hole in the cone holder, and so then flows into the supporting dish in whatever design the cone holder had made. Simples!

I absolutely love the idea. I love the flowing smoke. But I hate these crap cones from China. I've had a search around, and I can't see any named companies making these backflow cones. They tend to be nameless cones imported from China.

If anyone knows of a decent backflow cone maker, please, please let me know.

As it is, these cones are the worse I have ever known. And the staining is a serious nasty as well. Be warned!


Score: 2
***

Incense by Country


Vijayshree Golden Nag Champa Masala Cones


Second review - scroll down for earlier

This is lovely. Sweet and musky, with an evocative retro feel. This reminds me of good incense from the Seventies. It is clean and gentle, yet with a deep and yummy scent.  I adore this. It is less complex and heady than other Nag Champa - relying more on the musky tones of frangipani.


Date: April 2018   Score: 41


First review


I got this box of masala Nag Champa cones for £1.50 from mindbodyspiritonline. The shape is unusual, instead of the usual rounded cone, it is a four sided pyramid, formed and shaped by hand. It has a pleasant pungent note on the cone. When burning it is fairly sweet and musky. Very pleasant. It doesn't quite transport me, but it informs the room very gently, and creates a warm, seductive and welcoming atmosphere. I like it. The more I burn it the more I like it - there's an engaging jammy essence to the base muskiness. It's not what I would normally understand as a Nag Champa - it seems to contain plumeria or frangipani, rather than the magnolia or  champaca of Nag Champa. Normally such incenses are simply called Champa, but Vijayshree have chosen to call it Nag Champa, which expands my understanding of what is Nag Champa.

The  company was founded in 1990, and has three sites in Bangalore.  They use all natural ingredients, such as halmaddi (allanthus manbarca), nagchampa (mesua ferrea linn), sandalwood, and loban (boswellia sernata roxb).


Date: Dec 2017 Score: 38
***

Nag Champa


Hari Om Divine Incense Lavender



As I am working my way through my Hari Om collection for a second time, I am really impressed again by what a decent manufacturer they are. They are not an artisan or heavenly incense maker. They make everyday incense. But they are a quality everyday incense maker. The sticks are made to a consistently good standard - they burn evenly, with no off scents. There is no evidence of use of cheap charcoal or cheap bamboo, or cheap scent. They are at the top of the game for everyday incense, and some of their scents are so good, they can just nudge into heavenly, and be inspiring, even if perfume-dipped.  This lavender is crisp, clean, invigorating. It's not the same as fresh lavender by any means. It clearly is an essential oil incense, but is it very well done for what it is. It lifts and cleans a room, leaving a pleasant scent and a pleasant feeling. It gives energy and life. It's damn good.

Date: July 2018   Score: 38



Machine made perfume-dipped floral incense from Hari Om. It's a decent scent with the most authentic lavender aroma I've yet encountered on an incense stick. It has pine resin, rose, and sexual must in the mix. This is actually very attractive. I'm not much one for floral incense, but this one, with its inclination toward a deep sexuality as well as the heady pine notes of lavender,  is working on me.  I wasn't expecting to like this, but I do. A lot. It's a scent that is lively and invigorating, yet also has a powerful sexuality. It's not an obvious musky, seductive scent, this is oblique, yet very ballsy. It's a sexuality that is present without you being aware. Gosh, this is really good.

Date: Dec 2017  Score:  38
***

Hari Om Fragrance

Best of Lavender

Top Ten 
Perfume-Dipped Incense

Saturday, 30 December 2017

Asoka Trading Company / Bharath Darshan



Asoka Trading Company  was founded in Bangalore by T. V. Chalamiah Chetty, in 1943, after he had worked some years for other incense houses.  They make everyday synthetic-perfumed room fresheners. The company's key product is Bharath Darshan.  By 2024 the company had switched to trading under the Bharath Darshan name



Reviews

* = Review over five years old so may not be reliable


Asoka Bharath Darshan (P)
March 2017* - Score: 37



 Love in Life Jasmine (P)
May 2015* - Score: 25


Love in Life Rose (P)
 May 2015* - Score: 22


Love in Life Lavender (P)
May 2015* - Score: 21


Love in Life Sandalwood (P)
May 2015* -  Score: 20


Love in Life Lemongrass (P)
 May 2015* - Score: 20



Scents: 6
Top: 37
Bottom: 20
Average: 24 
All reviews are over five years old

Conclusion: All incense appears to be synthetic-perfumed, and  - other than the flagship Bharath Darshan - fairly low end. I'm keeping an open mind, but not an incense house I have any interest in exploring further.

***

Hari Om Fragrance




The Hari Om Fragrance company was brought to my attention by one of my UK readers, who said he'd had one of their masala incense sticks and it was very strong and very enjoyable. I had a look around, but Hari Om scents are not currently sold in the UK, so I got in touch with the company in Bangalore, who sent me a bunch for review. It was the masala sticks I was mainly interested in, but I ended up being quite impressed with some of their perfume dipped sticks as well.

The company was founded in 1990. They seem to be a decent representative of the everyday Indian incense market, as they carry a wide range of scents and types of incense, including masala and perfume-dipped, mainly aimed at the domestic market. They are, essentially, typical of domestic Indian incense. They copy existing popular brands such as Moksh, Sugandha Swarna, and Sri Sai Flora, but also have their own brands which are well established, such as Sai Bhajan, and some scents which appear to be original and quite divine, such as Hari Om Tez.

The quality of packaging is good, and the incenses, be they perfume-dipped or masala, are also all of a decent standard. I may not have liked all the scents, but they were all highly fragranced, long burning, and of a consistently decent standard. There is something for everyone in the range they offer, and appear to be excellent value for money.  I'm perhaps a little biased toward the company as, though I have to thank Clive Gilbert for drawing them to my attention, I've largely discovered and explored them myself. However, I do think Hari Om is an incense company that deserves to be better known in the West, and would do well in any incense shop. Contact details are on their website: here. [2023: The company website is down - contact details may be found on IndiaMart: Indiamart.com/hari-om-fragrance


Reviews
M=Masala  P=Perfume-dipped
(Scores from older reviews are in brackets)

* = Score over five years old, so may not be reliable


Hari Om Ganesh Arti Dhoop Bathi (M)
Oct 2021 - Score: 
40 


Dec 2023 - Score: 38


Hari Om Divine Incense Lavender (P)
July 2018 - Score: 38* 
(38)

Hari Om Vishwa Sai (Fluxo Incense) (M)
Sept 2017 - Score: 35*

July 2018 - Score: 35*  (31)

  
July 2018 - Score: 35*


Hari Om  Fluxo Incense (M)
Sept 2017 - Score: 34*


Hari Om Bhakti (M)
April 2019 - Score: 33


July 2018 - Score: 31* (29)


Hari Om Loban Incense Sambrani (P)
July 2018 - Score: 30* 
(35)


Hari Om Divine Incense Rajanigandha (P)
July 2018 - Score: 30* (36)

  
Hari Om The Club (P)
August 2018 - Score: 30* 


Hari Om Divine Incense Butmogra (P)
Oct 2023 - Score: 29↓  (32)


Hari Om 12/- Mangala Jyothi 3 in 1 Flora Sticks (M)
May 2023 - Score: 27 (32) (28)


Dec 2023 - Score: 27↓ 


Oct 2018 - Score: 23* (30) (20)


Hari Om Sugandha Mala (P)
Nov 2023 - Score: 21↓


 July 2018 - Score: 20*  (25)


Hari Om Divine Incense Champa (P)
July 2018 - Score: 19*


Hari Om Divine Incense Chandan (P)
Jan 2018 - Score: 17*


Scents reviewed: 20 (Reviews over five years old: 14) 
Highest score: 40
Lowest Score: 17 
Average top five: 37
Average score: 30
Overall score: 34 - Decent stuff 

***

The Best Incense Makers

Hari Om Sugandha Mala Incense Sticks

Second review - scroll down for earlier

"Treat Your Senses To Royalty". Not quite. Have a clear out of my incense stash - deciding to keep, chuck, or put in the outhouse. This is a fairly crude perfumed-charcoal incense. Very chemical. The scent is fairly sandalwood with some ladies knickers rose on top. This is possibly inspired by Sugandha Shringar - the incense that is possibly the first to blend a floral incense with a sandalwood incense.  My dislike of this is likely due to my dislike of synthetic rose perfume.  Anyway - this is a poor incense, though fine for keeping the cat's company in the outhouse. 


Date: Nov 2023  Score: 21



First review


The first thing I noticed about this incense is the similarity to Sugandha Swarna by Aparanji Industries.  This is something that companies in all industries do - copy successful brands. Hari Om seem to do it quite a lot. In a way, it is saying: "If you like XXX brand then try this, it is similar, and you may like it as well". On the whole, when Hari Om do it, the comparisons are at least as good, and sometimes better.  Considering, though, that Aparanji Industries have copyrighted the design of their Sugandha Swarna, I'm surprised that Hari Om get away with such an obvious copy, because they must be taking business away from Aparanji.

Similar box design to Sugandha Swarna

This is a highly scented perfumed-dipped charcoal stick. I may not like all the scents in the Hari Om range, but fair play, they do use strong scents. This one is a combination, for me, of burning rubber and butter with rose petal and jasmine perfume. It is not a scent I find hugely attractive, but it is stronger than the fairly similar scent of Sugandha Swarna. If someone likes Sugandha Swarna, they may well like Sugandha Mala even more.

For me this is a highly scented low end everyday incense. It's OK, and will fill a room with scent quite quickly, but the chemical notes hold it back from being a scent I'd burn when having friends or guests in the house. Each to their own. Others may like the quirky burning oil notes that vie with the floral notes for attention.


Date: Dec 2017   Score: 25
***

Hari Om Fragrance


Friday, 29 December 2017

The Indian Connection Nag Champa Gold




It didn't take that long. Somebody appears to have made an arrangement with the family company who made Happy Hari's Nag Champa Gold, and it's back. It is imported by the trade only company The Indian Connection. It looks like if you want Nag Champa Gold, you are going to have to go into your local incense supplier and ask them to buy it from The Indian Connection. I picked up mine from The Loft Ladder in Southampton.

We did a side by side comparison test. The Happy Hari was the winner, though the similarities were noted, and one of us felt that the differences, for her, were not significant. She liked them both. Happy Hari Gold was sweeter. To be fair, it was sweeter than when I last burned it. I think that aging may have something to do with that. In essence, this is as close to the original as you are going to get. It is soft, sweet, and easy going.


The two Golds side by side
The original Happy Hari at the top

Score: 35

Nag Champa

A. S. Agarbathi Works Ayurvedic Agarwood

Third review  - scroll down for earlier


In 2017 I called this "proper job masala" as it has a delightful scent, and presents as traditional masala (it has a coating of dusty melnoorva powder - sometimes [erroneously] called "masala powder"). However, since 2017 I've been learning more, observing more, experiencing more, researching more, and thinking more. Back in 2017 I was still fairly naive, and gathering  the bulk of my information from the internet, mainly blogs and forums - which themselves were fairly ignorant back then, mainly making assumptions. Blogs and forums these days are much better, particularly Reddit.Incense with its shared knowledge, some of which is first class, and Irene/SamsaSpoon's questing Rauchfahne blog, where she asks questions rather than make assumptions, or pretend to know, and her blog comes across as fiercely honest and intelligent.

Anyway, what I have learned since 2017 is that most "masala" incense these days uses "perfume"  - fragrance oils composed of natural and/or synthetic aromatic compounds. I have been studying perfume, and I'm now aware that as regards olfactory appreciation, quality is not measured by synthetic v natural, as some natural fragrances are difficult or impossible to capture, or perform poorly when extracted, so synthetics are widely used. The most expensive and admired perfumes are a blend of synthetics and naturals. What matters more than synthetic v natural, is the amount of fragrance oils used - or the purity. In the perfume world the highest concentration of fragrance is called "parfum", this passes down through Eau de toilette to Eau fraiche (or body mist) - which contains the lowest (and therefore usually the cheapest) concentration of fragrance compounds.  The amount of perfume used in an incense will generally determine the power/clarity of the fragrance (and the price). Other factors help - such as the binding material, burning material (charcoal is the purest), the carrier (which is used to dilute the perfume), and the fixative (which disperses the scent and allows it to linger); but without an appropriate dose of aromatic compounds (perfume/fragrance oil or dried natural ingredients)  the quality of the binders or fixatives won't amount to much.  It is unlikely that using a lot of fixative (usually some form of gum or resin, such as benzoin, frankincense, gum Arabic, or halmaddi) will overcome using a thin perfume or equivalent of Eau fraiche - though Japanese and Thai incense houses appear to specialise in using delicate amounts of fragrance ingredients, and can be very successful. In Indian incense, which is used frequently every day rather than in discrete limited moments of concentration, what is generally appreciated is a heady scent that manages to disperse around the house and linger poetically for some time.  

I've digressed a bit. A quick summary: Since 2017 I've learned that most Indian incense uses perfume as the main fragrance ingredient, so there could be little difference between a masala and a perfumed incense, other than presentation. Between a basic charcoal coated stick dipped in a fragrance oil, and a proper masala stick in which finely ground natural aromatic resins and plants and blended in a paste with fine quality binders and fixatives, there is a spectrum of incense. In the middle there are sticks made of paste containing fragrance oils which could be marketed as either masala or perfumed. This is one such stick. 

What strikes me today is the volatility of the perfume on the stick. I bought this pack in 2021, so this stick is around three years old, and still emits a powerful scent. The volatility indicates that the fragrance is a perfume (an essential oil or synthetic - I think it's not possible to tell the difference just on the scent); I like that it still smells fresh. Though, to be fair, I've just burned a ten year old perfumed incense, Mahendra Arora, which also smelled fresh on the stick (somewhat less so on the burn). Masala and perfumed incense can both be made with skill, care, and decent binders and fixatives which will ensure they project their scent for years to come. 

The scent on the stick is more floral than woody. Moderately sweet. Touches of citric. Leans toward damask rose.  The woods start coming though: beechwood - nutty and sweet; cedarwood - camphor and mineral; and the agarwood - dark, sexy, musky, fruity. Mmmmm. 

The burn is a little disappointing after experiencing the scent on the stick. But this is common with perfumed sticks - the heat of the burn alters the balance of the fragrance, as the top notes are consumed very quickly - sometimes (depending on the blend and the fixatives) the top notes are not really noticed at all. The burn tends to favour the release of the slower, heavier, base aroma compounds, though will confuse those scents with the scent of the smoke, which is composed of the flammable ingredients, the wood and tree bark powders, the charcoal powder, and the bamboo, and which tend to be deeper scents themselves. Generally there is a warmth from these deeper notes, and that is true here. The fragrance is moderate - not light, but certainly not heady. It is woody and rounded, though has acidic peaks with a moderate sweetness. It is pleasant and attractive, though doesn't really engage my interest or emotions. It diffuses moderately, and lingers moderately, so overall doesn't make a great impression.  I like this, though not as much as I did last time I reviewed in 2018. 


Date: Oct 2024  Score: 37 

Average all three reviews: 37 


Second review

I've been burning a bunch of the incense I've imported for sale on my newly opened shop on  eBay,  and I just wanted to get a perspective on some other incense, so opened my drawer and pulled out the first thing I touched, which was some basic everyday perfumed stuff from SAC, which had lost some of its fragrance through evaporation. So I needed something a bit better as contrast. I originally reviewed this Agarwood last year, and had been burning it on and off recently. Being a proper job masala, the fragrance doesn't evaporate. I'm not sure if it improves or even changes over time, but in my experience masala incense tends to hold up well, while perfumed incense fades and fades....

This Agarwood by A.S. Agarbathi Works has a lovely sweet woody aroma. I'm not sure I would entirely pin it down to agarwood as there are creamy notes of sandalwood and crisp golden citric cedarwood, but woody it is without a doubt. And it has honey in there. And halmaddi. Though not aggressive or sharp halmaddi, but a rounded, sweet, balsamic halmaddi. There is the earthy warmth and  fresh night air excitement of a camp fire, and the nostalgic evocation of a Seventies music festival. Burning damp wood, and the smoke from joss sticks and joints drifting in the night air. I'm really enjoying this. It's not top end heavenly. Its range is limited and sort of predictable. There's no depths, no range, and no soaring heights of excitement and delusion. But it's a bloody solid job masala, and certainly an incense I want to burn again and again, so this is moving up to nudge into the bottom end of my Heavenly department.


Date: Oct 2018   Score: 40

Average all three reviews: 37 


First review

I like agarwood. I picked this up in The Loft Ladder in Southampton. It is a proper job masala incense made by A. S. Agarbathi Works of Bangalore, who were founded in 1978.   They are members of the All India Agarbathi Manufacturers Association, which I have been intending to write about for some time.

Pleasant candy sweetness on the stick, with notes of beeswax and rose petals. As is often the case with masala incense containing halmaddi, the aroma on burning is different, with prickly warm wool dominating. There is also some honey notes, and some woody notes. The woody notes lean toward agarwood, but also contain beechwood, and I think it is the beechwood that comes more to the fore. It is a very attractive, fairly masculine scent. As with many of the best proper job masala, the scent continues to inform the room for around 24 hours afterwards.

I like this. It doesn't lift or transcend me, but is a solid proper job masala incense that should have a wide appeal.


Date: Dec 2017  Score: 33

Average all three reviews: 37