![]() |
| Incense at the 1933 Chicago World Fair |
I'm aware that incense was at the 1933 World Fair in Chicago - I have a poster showing that "Lama Incense" was exhibited there. It's unclear if the incense was Tibetan or Chinese, since the Lama Temple is a Tibetan temple in China, but it is unlikely that it was Indian. I do have evidence (including pictures) that Shroff Agarbathis had a stand at the 1930 British Industries Fair in Olympia, London.
| The Shroff family stand at the 1930 British Industries Fair in Olympia |
EssenceOfTheAges [Update: No longer in business] say of Shroff that their "first agarbathi (incense) manufacturing factory opened in 1882". This would be close to twenty years before agarbathis were developed in Mysore according to research done by the United Nations Industrial Development Organization. It is difficult to know what the Shroff company were doing in the late 1800s, though I am aware that Haridas Madhavdas Sugandi and Vithaldas Narayandas and Sons, both of Pune, make similar claims, and we know that incense was being made and sold for thousands of years before agarbathis or joss sticks were first developed, so it is possible that all three companies were making and selling some form of incense, though perhaps not incense in the form of sticks and cones as we know today - it is more likely to have been the dhoop form of incense, which is still used in India, though mostly in Tibet and Japan.
Reviews
![]() |
| Shroff Incense Mogra (M) Dec 2022 - Score: 45 |
![]() |
| Shroff Channabasappa Suganda Bathi March 2022 - Score: 43 |
![]() |
| Shroff Holy Incense (M) June 2024 - Score 41 |
![]() |
| Shroff Channabasappa Pearl Jan 2020 - Score: 39 |
![]() |
Jan 2022 - Score: 39 |
![]() |
| Shroff Mysore Musk (PM) June 2024 - Score: 37 |
![]() |
| Shroff Sandal Flora (PM) July 2024 - Score: 35 |
![]() |
| Shroff Mysore Sandal (PM) June 2024 - Score: 35 |
![]() |
| Shroff Channabasappa Super Star Jan 2022 - Score: 35 |
![]() |
| Shroff Green Durbar Nov 2022 - Score: 35 |
![]() |
| Shroff Red Sandal (PM) July 2024 - Score: 35 |
![]() |
| Shroff Amber Rose (PM) July 2024 - Score: 33 |
![]() |
| Shroff 505 Amber 1882 (PM) June 2024 - Score: 30 |
![]() |
| Shroff Pavitram (PM) June 2024 - Score: 30 |
![]() |
Shroff Paneer (PM) June 2024 - Score: 28 |
Scents tried: 17
Highest score: 45
Lowest score: 28
Average: 35
Conclusion: A small traditional Indian producer with a shop in Avenue Road, Bangalore, founded in 1882. They sold incense to the local Mysore king, exhibited in a British Industries fair in Olympia in 1930, and were a founder member of the All India Agarbathi Manufacturers’ Association, so this is a company with a long, and at one time distinguished, history. They have not prospered over the years, so have not expanded or modernised. They continue to make incense in the traditional manner, partly because they do not have the money for investment, and partly because that is what their small market expects. They wish to modernise and expand, but are constrained both by their lack of money, and by the expectations of their market. People buy from them because they are traditional. Some of the recipes and ingredients have been modernised over the years, mostly because of dwindling supplies and rising costs, though sometimes because they genuinely feel that a modern method or ingredient is beneficial to the incense, and acceptable to the customer. So they are not completely locked into the past.
They are not a well known company, but have got a small and loyal market of buyers who enjoy traditionally made Indian incense. They group their incense into dry and wet masala. The dry masala is cheaper and contains little to no essential oils - relying on dried ingredients - leaves, petals, tree bark, resin ,etc; the wet masala adds essential oils to the mix. In my experience it is the wet masala incenses that produce the richer, sweeter, more attractive scent. The wet masalas, however, are not thick and damp like flora or fluxo incenses; they are more in line with the modern perfumed-masala incenses.
I like Shroff. I like their history, and their struggle to make a place for themselves as a small traditional company in a modern market; and I like their wet masala incense. I am less keen on the dry stuff. I think to appreciate Shroff it is better to pay a few dollars more and get the wet stuff.
![]() |
| The Best Incense Makers |
![]() |
| Bangalore Babes Incense Makers in Bangalore |
![]() |
| What's The Best Incense In The World? |






















Shroff is one of my favorite incense makers, usually harder to get here in Dubai, so I usually go to their warehouse and get from there but now, shroff incenses are commercially availability in India through scenting secrets website. I’m so happy. Btw, oodabatti is still used and is the word for incense sticks in Tamil.
ReplyDeleteScenting Secrets has an enticing selection of incense, but sadly they only ship within India.
Delete