The Incense Hunter

Photos used in reviews are taken by me, sometimes supported by promotional photos. Some illustrative images on general pages may be AI-generated or AI-assisted.

Sunday, 21 June 2026

Smells Like Spells Thor Career Spell



There is an interesting cross-cultural blend in play in the incense sold by the retail brand Smells Like Spells. The company is registered in the UK, has a store in Lithuania, sources the incense from Nepal, and uses Norse mythology as part of the imagery to sell the incense. Thor is the Norse god of thunder - the Lithuanian (or Baltic) equivalent is Perkunas - also a god of thunder. 

Fragrances listed are nards (spikenard - Nardostachys jatamansi - a plant in the honeysuckle family), juniper berries, and valerian (a herb related to spikenard, and whose roots are similar in character and fragrance).  This is a savoury and fairly smoky incense - fragrant bonfire, tobacco, and smouldering dried peat. It's OK, but not really my thing - fairly typical basic Nepalese incense. 

Available in a glass tube of approx five sticks from Forest Home at £7, shipping extra; or from Smells Like Spells for €8, shipping extra.  As a handy comparison - average cost per pack of Nepal/Tibet incense sold by Padma Store in Germany is around €4, with average price per five sticks working out at around €1, plus  shipping. 


Date: Jun 2026   Score:  25/50 
***


Smells Like Spells Odin Focus Spell



An interesting aspect of Smells Like Spells incense is that each tube is marked with the phase of the moon it was made. My tube of Eir Healing Spell is marked "Waxing Gibbous Moon", while this Odin Focus Spell is marked "Waxing Crescent Moon". SeaWitchBotanicals provide a guide to the phases of the moon. Craftworkers and herbalists who align their incense making with the phases of the moon treat the lunar cycle as a sort of energy clock that governs the intent, formulation, and efficacy of the incense making - along the lines of "planting, building, celebrating, releasing". This is a system of symbolic and spiritual connections that informs the decisions of the maker,  rather than any specific chemical or scientific action. The moon's influence on human behaviour has been researched and documented,  and while considered statistically small, research does not completely rule it out. But the general conclusion is that while the effect of the moon on incense making provides a potential framework of mindfulness and psychological structure for the craftsperson who wishes  to be open to ritual tradition, it is unlikely to a matter of physical chemistry, so the moon's phases would not have an influence on machinery involved in the incense making. 

On my first run through of the Smells Like Spells incense range, I was so struck by the Nepalese incense style of the sticks, that I hadn't really noticed their soft resinous nature, and now that I am tuned into it, I am liking these sticks more and more. I shall come back to them in a month or two to see how I feel then.

Sage and curry spices and something delicate and sweet, almost floral, are the scent notes I pick up on the stick. Musky resin is the first scent impression on the burn, followed by woods and dried berry fruit. The fragrance ingredients are given as agarwood, champaca, and juniper berries - a curious combination. Agarwood seems a bit too serious and rustic for the delicate champaca notes - sandalwood might be a better base. Indeed, I'm mostly getting woods from this on the burn. The sweet floral notes I picked up on the stick appear to not be strong enough to make themselves known when the incense is burned. After getting into a position where I was feeling that these Smells Like Spells Nepal sticks were a little more special than the everyday Himalayan incense, this one brings me back down to earth. But it's OK. 

Available from Forest Home at £7 for a glass tube of approx five sticks; shipping extra; or from Smells Like Spells for €8, shipping extra.  As a handy comparison - average cost per pack of Nepal/Tibet incense sold by Padma Store in Germany is around €4, with average price per five sticks working out at around €1, plus  shipping. 


Date: Jun 2026   Score: 27/50


Saturday, 20 June 2026

Smells Like Spells Idunn Beauty Spell



There is a pleasant note of sweet licorice on the cold throw scent on the stick. Warm, quite natural scent on the burn. Fairly soft and attractive. There's a feel of a rustic music festival from the Seventies - bonfires in the distance, and cannabis closer by. Some chocolate, resin, and licorice notes rounds it out nicely. I get out the document that comes with the incense (each Smells Like Smells incense comes with quite a detailed document giving details of the ingredients, the person in Norse mythology after whom the incense is named, and a ritual to perform while burning the incense), and note that the main fragrance ingredients are listed as frankincense, agarwood, and licorice. And I can see that. This is actually much softer, and more rounded, and more resin based than other Nepalese style incense I've burned. I quite like this. Much more than I expected. 

Available as a glass tube of approx five sticks from Forest Home at £7, shipping extra; or from Smells Like Spells for €8, shipping extra.  As a handy comparison - average cost per pack of Nepal/Tibet incense sold by Padma Store in Germany is around €4, with average price per five sticks working out at around €1, plus  shipping. 


Date: Jun 2026   Score:  35/50
***



Smells Like Spells

 



Smells Like Spells in a British owned retail shop in Vilnius, the capital of Lithuania, which sells "Norse Magic" related candles, home fragrance, and incense under the Smells Like Spells brand. The incense, as indicated on the accompanying paperwork, is made in Nepal. In discussion with the owners, Vilius and Marius, they assured me that despite all indications to the contrary, the sticks are made by their team in Lithuania under various stages of the moon, which are noted on the packaging, and not in Nepal. There is an adage that if it looks like a duck, walks like a duck, and quacks like a duck, then it is a duck. The Smells Like Spells sticks, look, walk, and quack like a Nepalese duck, and the paperwork appears to confirm this. But the owners assure me the paperwork connection to Nepal is due to Nepal having certain Norse Mythology related herbs that are not available in Lithuania. That the sticks look, burn, and smell exactly like Nepalese incense is, it seems, simply a coincidence. For those who wish to engage with the Norse Magic of Lithuanian-made incense sticks, they will need to suspend disbelief while reading this book of spells. Others may simply, and perhaps more realistically, compare these sticks to what else is available from the Himalayan region, and consider if the Lithuanian connection is worth the extra money. 

I'm not a big fan of Nepalese incense, though I have enjoyed these sticks; and I do love the imagery and packaging around them. Also, as an incense hunter, I love to see what is going on in other countries. And I'm enchanted by the Lithuanian connection as well as the references to the phases of the moon when the incense was made (true or not, I love the idea), and that they are sold in glass tubes with corked lids. So there is much about Smells Like Spells which I've enjoyed - including the incense itself. And I know there are those who do love Nepalese incense more than me, and would also be enchanted by the Norse mythology and the Lithuanian connection, so there is a market out there for Smells Like Spells incense, and I wish Vilius and Marius well for future sales and development. 



Reviews 


Smells Like Spells Idunn Beauty Spell
Jun - 2026 - Score: 35/50 
  

  Smells Like Spells Eir Healing Spell
Jun 2026 - Score: 30/50


Smells Like Spells Odin Focus Spell
Jun 2026 - Score: 27
   

Smells Like Spells Thor Career Spell
Jun 2026 - Score: 25
  

Reviews: 4 
Top score: 35 
Low score: 25
Average: 29

***


Nippon Kodo Meiko Eiju



Described by Nippon Kodo as "Spicy Sandalwood" with "various materials utilized in Chinese medicine for centuries" giving the keynotes of sandalwood and cinnamon.  Eiju, which translates as "long life", is one of Nippon Kodo's popular everyday incenses. Meiko in this context translates as "excellent" or "special", so Meiko Eiju translates as something rather prosaic like "Special Long Lasting Incense". I've seen some shops describe the scent keynotes as "Cinnamon & Amber", and Irene of Rauchfahne has reviewed a packet subtitled "Spicy Amber". 

  

There is a bright, pleasant scent on the stick which presents to me as rather like the fantasy scent amber, along with some powdery perfume notes, suggesting modern aroma chemicals, and some vague wood notes. Scent on the burn is a little rough from the sandalwood and binder wood paste. I'm not really getting much spice, though there is a general sweet warmth - quite modest, but present. Caramel notes wisp in and out, which would likely come from the cinnamon; and the cinnamon could also give an impression of amber. Given the sweetness, the general perfume quality of some of the fragrance, and the relative low cost of this Japanese incense, I suspect that the powdered cassia bark has been assisted by something like cassia oil and/or cinnamaldehyde.  On the whole a modest but pleasant everyday room freshener incense.

Available from eBay, and from Nippon Kodo. A trial pack of five sticks is available from eBay for £1.69 plus postage.


Date: Jun 2026    Score: 28/50 
***




Friday, 19 June 2026

Gyokushodo Jinko Kojurin



I couldn't find a reliable website for Gyokushodo - information mostly comes from sales bling on various shop websites, so I have treated it with some caution. Many shops say the company was formed in 1804, though that appears to be the year a merchant, Sakubei II, moved his wholesale business from Hiroshima to Osaka, which has developed a reputation as a major label incense centre with companies such as Baieido and Nippon Kodo, as well as Gyokushodo. In 1804, Sakubei II was trading in Chinese herbs and ingredients for incense making, but wasn't making incense himself. It appears to be 1850 when he started making his own incense, based on knowledge he acquired from  dealing with China traders, and formed Gyokushodo. Its popular everyday line is Kojurin, which means something like "Forest Fragrance", and combines natural woods with fragrance oils. Jinko means agarwood

  


Pleasant gourmandy scent, a touch of roasted shallots, some dry fried fish, fragrant wood, and a general rustic, savoury, and mysterious accord. It's not a sophisticated, intelligent, or balanced accord - difficult to assume anyone has designed this. It is what it is, and you'll either like it or not. I'm OK with it, and I can see why it would be popular in Japan, though I can also see why it's a low cost everyday incense. If rustic woody scents which lean toward fairground onions rocks your world, then this may the incense for you. 

Available in several places - AtmosphereIncense in Singapore who ship worldwide, Wa-No-Kaori  in Japan, JapaneseIncense in the USA, and from Shi on eBay in the UK, who also sell a trial pack


Date: Jun 2026  Score: 28/50
***




Thursday, 18 June 2026

Shorindo Chahana / Chabana - Tea Flower / Camellia



Shorindo is based on Awaji Island, which has 14 incense makers, and has a claim to make 70% of Japan's incense. Incense making on the island started in 1850 when an islander, Tatsuzo Tanaka, copied incense production methods from the then capital of Japanese incense making, Sakai, and brought them to Awaji, where the nishi-kaze (west wind) dried the incense, and its port enabled the incense to be easily traded around Japan. The legend of agarwood washing ashore in Japan in 595 places the beach on Awaji Island, which sounds like colourful marketing by the local incense makers. Though there are claims that the Awaji incense makers were the first to make smoke-less incense, I've not found reliable evidence of that, though the island is well known for its daily incense and low-smoke incense, which is popular with modern Japanese because homes tend to be small with closed windows, so there is a preference for mild and low smoke incense.  Awaji is also known for "blending western perfumes with the eastern cultural use of incense woods", which means they use modern aroma chemicals. 

Shorino is popular in Japan for this particular incense - Chahana (or Chabana - it is translated both ways). The word translates as "Tea Flower", though "Camellia" is sometimes used as that is a tea flower. Camellia (or "tea flower") does not produce a significant scent, so modern aroma chemicals are used instead. Shorino use charcoal and makko dust which is blended into a paste with a camellia aroma chemical, and then dried in the nishi-kaze wind. 

  
茶花線香 - Cha-hana - Tea Flower


When burned this produces a soft and delicate floral aroma, mingled with some rustic wood and charcoal notes. Modestly pleasant room freshener. Though the dispersal and retention is barely significant, there is a place for such delicate floral everyday incenses. Not really my thing, but the story of Awaji Island is interesting, and this is a popular incense in Japan, so worth hunting down. 

Available in several places - AtmosphereIncense in Singapore who ship worldwide, Wa-No-Kaori  based in Japan who ship worldwide, and from Shi on eBay in the UK, who also sells a trial pack


Date: Jun 2026  Score: 26/50
***