There's a delicious cool sugary spicy fragrance on the sticks. Sharp and clear - quite appropriate for an incense named after the high peaks of the mountain range to the north of India. It's quite a powdery scent, and I'm thinking of sherbet, something I have thought about in several incenses I've recently reviewed - either that's a curious coincidence, or I've got sherbet on the brain!
There's a smoky element to the fragrance on the burn, though much of the promise on the stick does come through. The scent disperses gently but reasonably firmly around the room. I am burning the stick at the far end of my room, and the fragrance, along with some ticklish smoky notes, do come my way quite easily. It's not a sophisticated or exquisite fragrance, but it is very decent and pleasurable, lifting the room with its cool notes. Fresh, clean, uplifting. Decent enough.
There's a smoky element to the fragrance on the burn, though much of the promise on the stick does come through. The scent disperses gently but reasonably firmly around the room. I am burning the stick at the far end of my room, and the fragrance, along with some ticklish smoky notes, do come my way quite easily. It's not a sophisticated or exquisite fragrance, but it is very decent and pleasurable, lifting the room with its cool notes. Fresh, clean, uplifting. Decent enough.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please leave a comment: