Date: Jan 2022 Score: 37
Third review |
A reappraisal. The scent on the stick is quite dense and sombre, floral for sure, with some wood supporting it, and a little sharp volatility. Pleasant; and, while not mighty or spiritual, is inviting. When lit it burns awkwardly with some fibre strands, which makes me assume it is a coconut charcoal, and that the company have not yet perfected the combustible elements. Satya have had recent problems with that as well. Different burns bring out different scent aspects (the "varied" or "inconsistent" notes from the scent comparison above) - currently it is mostly sandalwood. I'm getting little of the fruit or flowers. This particular burn is not impressing me, and I'm lowering the score again. When it is good, this is a decent floral incense that can stand with top end masala, but there are inconsistency issues which means that sometimes, as now, the better fragrant elements have not made it satisfactorily enough into the mix. I suspect they have the right ingredients, but not yet the right production or manufacturing to ensure those ingredients are combined well. This is now becoming simply smoky and a tad unpleasant. I'm lowering the score, but keeping it in my Decent Stuff category, because when it's good it is good. And it has mostly been good.
Date: Nov 2021 Score: 30
Second review |
I put Capture into a little scent comparison with other decent masala incense (plus a few perfumed ones). It didn't stand up as well as I thought it might. Though pleasant, it was felt to be a little too "smoky" or intense in relation to the fragrance, and that some elements of the scent felt a little artificial. Initially it impressed as quite "churchy" with a floral and fruit scent, a little more floral than fruit, and that it was sweet and pleasant, though not profound. There was a sense separately noted by myself and a couple of others that some fragrance elements were not natural, for example that it had a washing up liquid "pink grapefruit" scent, or that there was a sense of fruit juice, but a cordial rather than fresh fruit. It has variety (or inconsistency, as the variety is not part of an understood scent journey, and the scents emerge sort of randomly rather than in an integrated or natural manner) and is rather pleasant, though there is something missing. And the burn continues to be problematic.
Date: Nov 2021 Score: 32
First review |
A beautiful box of flora incense sent to me by Umraz Ahmed of El Incenses and Fragrances (ELIF). ELIF was founded in 1970 by Umraz's father, and the company at the time were competing at the same quality level as Satya and Sai Flora, though did not have the international reach. Then, for a variety of reasons, the company closed. Umraz has reopened it this year, with an intention to compete again at a high quality level, citing Satya and Balaji as companies they hope to match. I had queried with Umraz the price of the incense, as it is marketed at 200 Rupees for 50g, which is among the most expensive Indian incense I have seen (excluding Indian incense resold under Western brand names in the UK and US, which can fetch much higher prices than in the domestic market), and the response is that the company are aiming at the premier end of the market, and Umraz feels that the halmaddi they use is of such quality that it gives them a unique selling point.
ELIF make "flora" incense, which is something I have been looking into recently, particularly in the sense of the difference between a "flora" incense and a "fluxo" - both terms were used on Sai Flora, which is the oldest flora/fluxo I am aware of, and which seems to serve as the template or inspiration for most others I have encountered. I am still not quite sure what a "flora" is, or how it differs from a "fluxo", partly because makers seem to use those terms quite loosely. However, what most floras and fluxos I have experienced seem to have in common is that they are visibly fatter than standard masala incense, and moister. There is an obvious use of essential oil in them. This Capture has a beautiful oil, quite juicy and fruity, slightly citric - kind of tangerine. And there is some creamy white wood, not spicy or masculine like cedar, but soft, feminine, and gentle like a white or Indian sandalwood. I like this a lot. When I first burned it, it was after I had been burning some Satya, particularly Karma, and it felt to me to match the Satya, but not exceed it. But after spending more time with Capture, it is seducing me with it's gentle and beautiful charm. It is not quite on the same heavenly level as something like Bengali Jungle, which I have been playing with for some weeks now, nor some of the world class masala incense of Koya's which I have been burning a lot of this past week, such as their Nirvana, but it is certainly competitive with Satya on quality (though not on price), and Sai Flora, though I find it way more refined than Sai Flora, so it's not a direct comparison.
Sai Flora is an assertive and unusual incense - it can be somewhat overpowering, but much of the appeal is on its sheer intensity, which can be matched by Bengali Jungle, and then surpassed in terms of beauty.
The main experience with masala is often the overall impression, and it can be hard to pin down individual scents or precise moments, though some of the moments we noted when burning these sticks were warmth, wood, raw flesh, sweetness, intensity, and a sense of difference. A curious set of experiences when listed like that, but somehow it gelled together. I liked it the most of the three of us, but all in all, we were all impressed, and I feel it is certainly a player in the field of top end masala incense.
Flora, Fluxo, and Supreme |
A little scent comparison |
Vintage Incense (Incense not available from this brand for over a year) |
Capture is a hand rolled, fat, and dusted stick which is a slow burner. It is more patchouli forward than its sister, Sunflora, which to me is more sandal forward. This makes for a more complex fragrance and a nice alternative. Both have that rich halmaddi base which drives the fragrance. I think I prefer Capture to the others in this line, but that is a subjective take and others will have their own preference. This is a big scent and will fill a large room easily. For my office, I usually can't burn a full stick so it can also last for multiple burns. Great value.
ReplyDeleteAs I've been saying about Floras, that they are not really vertically scented fragrances. They are more horizontally scented where the overall mix is massive and very rich with a slight bias towards a particular scent, not an overt one. To me, this is what distinguishes Floras from the Masala Bathis. With Masala Bathi, there is always a scent that is focused on and it is usually the name of the stick. The only label I can come up with about Floras is that they are all Champa-like and should be luxurious and massive
ReplyDeleteThe Capture definitely falls squarely into my Flora definition of horizontal with a slight bias towards the Patchouli in it. At first, I was taken with it, but I keep going back to the Sunflora as the standard. Capture needs a larger space to spread out into. It is powerful. Separating what a Flora is from a standard Masala is important to get a feel of. They are different and supply their fragrance for different moods, feelings. Masalas like HH, Gokula, TOI, etc., are all going for the verticality in fragrance, some more so than others. That is the current trend in the marketplace. I like both so much and I'm happy to be able to understand the difference now.
I'm not clear on your terms "vertical" and "horizontal". Are you calling a narrow scent profile a "vertical", and a broad scent profile a "horizontal"? In beer and wine culture we call a tasting session involving beers/wine from one brewery/winery but different years a vertical tasting , while a session comparing a style from one year across several breweries/wineries is a horizontal session. This could also be applied to other product comparison sessions.
DeleteI kinda like your use of the terms, though I will remain conservative and continue to use narrow and broad for the scent profile, and vertical and horizontal for particular taste comparisons.