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Tuesday, 13 February 2024

Hari Darshan Sandalwood

 


This is part of a series of three "Premium Flora Battis" or "Temple Flora" which are aimed at the luxury box or quality masala market. I reviewed the Gold a little while ago. The marketing on the website says that they are hand-rolled, and that generally would be the understanding for a quality masala because the target consumers prefer the idea of hand rolled; however, these sticks give the appearance of being machine extruded, before being finished in a sandy brown melnoorva powder.  Looking more closely, I think they are hand-rolled - very neat and tidy. The girl who rolled these must be very experienced. 



I'm becoming aware that most luxury boxes contain "Flora" style incense, and that most "Flora" style incense is sold in luxury style boxes. There is a relationship. At least in India - when Flora style incense is packaged for a Western reseller such as Happy Hari, TOI, or Bhagwan, they use the same packaging as for the rest of their output. 

The scent on the stick is very heady - there is a volatility, but there is also the impact of the perfume, which is rich and indulgent. There is a sense of wetness in the scent, and the feel of oils and perfumes rather than resins and dried plants.  There is sandalwood in the scent, also some light florals - jasmine with a touch of rose. It's a very beguiling scent. A little lighter and floral than is my particular taste, but there's enough sweet meat and temptation to hold my interest. 

The burn is more gentle and refined than I was expecting. I tend to like my top incense to be a bit heady, rough, and wild, though I'm happy with a more refined and well behaved incense for everyday use. Which puts me in a small dilemma here. As I tend to view luxury box / flora incense as something a little special rather than everyday. And this is more weighty than an everyday incense, though not quite weighty enough (for me) to be an incense I'll sit down to consider and enjoy by itself. Though, to be honest, the only times I really sit down and consider an incense is when I'm reviewing it. The rest of the time I'll be burning an incense to perfume my home, cover a bad smell, or create a mood. You know, more practical, everyday things than following something like the Kodo - the Japanese art of appreciating incense.  I'll burn a special incense at certain times - though they'll generally be when I'm doing something else. I like a decent incense when I'm cooking a decent meal as it gets me in the mood, sometimes when I'm relaxing with a book or some good music, or in the bedroom on date night, etc. Yeah. This'll do nicely for one of those occasions. Woody, gentle, lightly floral, touches of violets, jasmine, hints of citrus fruits, supported by a refined musky, sweet patchouli style of creamy wood. Good stuff. 




4 comments:

  1. I like this incense. My favorite Hari darshan incense is their Masala khus and temple gold.

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    1. I didn't get on with the Gold, though when I finished reviewing this Sandalwood I said to myself that I would return to the Gold. I perhaps wasn't in the right mood or frame of mind when I first reviewed it because I gave it a low score. I know that I always emphasise that it's the scent that matters not the method of production or the incense house, but I felt that there is such a discrepancy between the scores of the two incenses in the same range, that it would be worth a revisit to see if I had been a bit mean.

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  2. Hi Steve, thanks for mentioning us. We import incense in bulk, print out boxes in Europe and pack it ourselves, I think TOI do the same, I've seen a video of them packing increase in their Croydon warehouse. Best wishes, Eugene

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    1. Thanks Eugene. Yes, I've understood that packaging is often done in house by Western resellers. I was surprised, though, to learn from Ashok at Padma Store that the Happy Hari he has sold, be it from Paul or Cory, he has packaged himself, even creating the labels himself from templates that Paul sent him.

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