Incense In The Wind

Burner Burner - Carhartt jacket incense burner

Wednesday, 4 March 2026

Jeomra's Raeucherwelt (Incense World)

 

Georg Huber (Jeomra) runs an online incense shop, Raeucherwelt.de ("Incense World"), specialising in pure frankincense, and since 2022 has been making incense in Germany with an incense machine he ordered from India. I'm excited at what he is doing, and while the results, for me, are a little inconsistent - at their best, such as with Natur Pur Weihrauch Rose, they are awesome. 

I find what Huber is doing fascinating, along the same lines as what Benyamin Shoham is doing with Seraphim Incense in Israel, and particularly what Pure Yemen are doing in Yemen  - creating modern incense sticks using pure ingredients in countries which do not yet have a tradition or culture of incense sticks. This is exciting, bold, ground-breaking incense making, and they deserve respect and support.



Reviews


  

Jeomra’s Raucher Stabchen Hojari  (M)
Feb 2025 - Score: 35


Jeomra's Stabchen Natur Pur Amber (RS)
Dec 2025 - Score: 27

Reviews: 4
High score: 50
Low score: 27
Average: 35

***



Tuesday, 3 March 2026

Jeomra’s Raucher Stabchen Natur & Duft Nag Champa Surya

 


Georg Huber (Jeomra) runs an online incense shop, Raeucherwelt.de ("Incense World"), specialising in pure frankincense, and since 2022 has been making incense in Germany with an incense machine he ordered from India. I'm excited at what he is doing, and while the results, for me, are a little inconsistent - at their best, such as with Natur Pur Weihrauch Rose, they are awesome. 

This Nag Champa comes from Jeomra's Natur & Duft ("Nature & Fragrance") range, indicating, unlike the Natur Pur range, that the scent accord comes from a blend of natural and synthetic fragrances. Which seems to fit in with what we know about Satya Nag Champa - I've been having a discussion about this issue on Reddit. A mass spectrum analysis of Satya Nag Champa indicates that it is mostly natural, but uses one synthetic aroma - 4-tert-butylcyclohexyl acetate, which is sold under trade names such as Vertenex and Lorysia; so it seems appropriate that Huber is also using a blend of natural and synthetic. 

The cold throw scent on the stick is sweet and floral with a tendency to veer toward rose and jasmine, with some cold mineral elements close to talc and chalk, and a hint of White Musk, with a tickle of vanilla. It's clean and charming, though lacking in the warmth and beauty of the Nag Champas I mostly like, especially Satya's, which I find adorable on the stick. 

The hot throw scent on the burn is more smoky and harsh than I was expecting. This is a stick that I need to place quite a distance away. Given more space and air it becomes more polite and gentle. The wood scent, however, remains too dry for my taste. Tastes differ - I know many folks enjoy the dry quality of Pondicherry and Tibetan incense, while I am not fond of them. There is a certain natural feel about the wood notes, though it's the natural feel of dried plants burning - it's just a little too rugged and lacking in sweetness for my taste. There are some top floral notes which I find more cheerful and acceptable than the base wood notes, with sparkles of vanilla which lighten the load, but they are somewhat dwarfed by the severity of the woods. 

I've not really engaged with this stick. It's a curiously sombre take on the usually quite sweet and dreamy Nag Champa scent accord. This is less commercial, less accessible, and more serious. There will be people who like it - especially those who enjoy Tibetan and Pondicherry incense, but it's not for me, and I can't see it having a wide commercial appeal. It doesn't feel as though it has been put together to appeal to the masses. And it doesn't feel as though it has been put together to appeal to those who like Nag Champa. It's an individual construct around the idea of Nag Champa, though perhaps deconstruct might be a more appropriate description. If it was more to my taste I would spend more time to unravel the scents, but it has not reached out to me, and indeed at times pushed me away. 

The description on the website says: "For Surya Champa, we use the fragrance base typical of all traditional Indian Champa recipes, consisting of Halmaddi resin, honey and sandalwood, and add a blend of the finest, pure essential oils as well as safe fragrance oils to create a heavy, intense and captivating floral scent...Surya Nag Champa is a typical temple fragrance and spreads a meditative yet cheerful atmosphere in your living spaces."

Ingredients: "Balloon Dust, sandalwood from Indonesia, beechwood charcoal from Germany, Halmaddi from India, Joss powder from Vietnam, Loban powder from India, forest honey from Germany, sandalwood essential oil, patchouli essential oil, vanillin, nature-identical oils, perfume". 

There is a comma in the translation between "Balloon Dust" and "sandalwood from Indonesia", though I don't think there should be - I think it should read "Balloon dust sandalwood from Indonesia". Balloon dust sandalwood is very fine powder gathered in bags when cutting sandalwood with machine saws. There is also sandalwood oil in the mix, which suggests that the wood dust is not fragrant enough by itself - I assume the sandalwood dust is mainly used as the combustible. It does have an element of Chinese incense about the scent, and they tend to use powdered sandalwood as the main combustible source. I think the bulk of the scent I'm getting is from the wood dust. I think the other fragrance ingredients are less noticeable to me because my olfactory attention has been caught and held by the wood powder aroma. 

While this has not been exactly to my taste, I find what Huber is doing fascinating, along the same lines as what Benyamin Shoham is doing with Seraphim Incense in Israel, and particularly what Pure Yemen are doing in Yemen  - creating modern incense sticks using pure ingredients in countries which do not yet have a tradition or culture of incense sticks. This is exciting, bold, ground-breaking incense making, and they deserve respect and support. Available from Raeucherwelt.de at €12.90 for 10 sticks


Date: Mar 2026   Score: 28
***



Saturday, 28 February 2026

Om Sai Om Brand Trishala Patchouli Dhoop Sticks

 


The Trishala range by Om Sai (Om Brand) of Mumbai are low cost everyday room freshener perfumed sticks and dhoops. Decent value for money for modest but bright and professional machine-made incense sticks. The scents are all pleasant with nothing that is ugly, but also nothing which stands out as more than a basic room freshener. The name comes from Trishala,  the mother of Mahavira,  a Supreme Preacher in Jain religion - it would suggest purity, auspiciousness, and tradition for Indians. The patchouli is the fragrance I have most enjoyed in the range when I reviewed it in joss stick format: Trishala Patchouli

I've not enjoyed these Trishala Patchouli dhoop sticks as much as I enjoyed the Patchouli joss sticks. These present a little too much as slick, clean modern synthetic perfume. There is little character here, and little in common with regular patchouli scents. These leans a little too much toward White Musk style synthetics. Too clean, too well behaved. It's a pleasant scent, but not really for me, especially as dhoop tends to be smokier and heavier than joss sticks. 

Available for 55 Rupees (India only) direct from Om Sai Om Brand


Date: Feb 2026   Score:  28/50

White Musk - the clean synthetic

 


White Musk is a hugely popular synthetic scent, much used in clothes conditioners, pefumes and incenses. The first fully synthetic scents were the original nitro musks developed by Albert Baur in 1888,  though these were problematic due to health concerns, so were replaced in the mid 20th century by cleaner, safer polycyclic musks, such as white musk. These modern musks  are today widely used in perfumery. White musk is pleasantly clean, powdery, and fresh with a scent like freshly washed bed sheets.  It is musk with the sexy, animalistic parts removed. 


Reviews



Three Lotus / Himalayan Flower White Musk 
Nov 2024 - Score: 23


Stamford White Musk (P)
May 2025 = Score: 22


Feb 2026 - Score: 22=


HEM White Musk cones (P)
May 2018 - Score: 20*


Nikhil's Nature's Blessing White Musk (P)
Feb 2024 - Score: 18


Emporium Mystic Scents White Musk (P)
May 2019 - Score: 
18


Reviews: 7
Top score: 28
Low score: 18
Average: 22


Manohar Royal Sandal

 


Royal, like Durbar, Mahal, and Gold, is a term used to suggest richness and opulence, and that term is certainly appropriate here. I have reviewed over 80 different sandalwood incenses from the sublime to the ridiculous, and, as far as Indian single scent sandalwood incense sticks or cones or dhoops go, this is one of the most sublime. A tasty blend of natural and modern oils to balance and bring out the best in the concept of what a sandalwood scent should be. 

The clues are in the cold throw scent on the stick - clean linen and scintillating diamonds indicate modern aldehydes to smooth out the rougher, richer, more earthy and abrasive tones of the natural oils. The accord is awesome - it feels well designed and balanced. The hot throw scent on the burn brings depth and an exciting natural feel, and this is where the earthy, woody notes make themselves known. 

On a personal level I'd like more sweetness, more wetness, more darkness, musk, and sex appeal, but these are personal quibbles, this is a beautiful and alluring sandalwood - very Royal indeed. 

Manohar incenses are available outside India from The Incense Atelier at prices from £1.75 to £2.75 for 10g plus shipping. There's also a very useful sample pack of 10 different fragrances (2 sticks each) for £3.95 plus postage.  


Date: Feb 2026   Score: 41/50
***



Thursday, 26 February 2026

Bangalore Incense Store Jaygee's Sahukar Chandan

 


Bangalore Incense Store was set up in 2008 by Jaygee Mavalur as an outlet for his Jaygee Industries incense company. He also sells incense under the brand name Gurugee. Jaygee's family have been involved in incense making for 60 years over three generations. Sahukar Chandan is part of Jaygee's  range of luxury boxes - large, often lavishly or elegantly decorated boxes usually containing flora style incense, or sticks close to that style - rich and heady with oils. They are the most expensive domestic Indian incense, and are not often exported (at least in the luxury box format). Chandan is sandalwood. Sahukar is a money lender or wealthy person. The name could be a reference to the richness of the sandalwood, or a general invocation of wealth and fortune, which is popular in Indian and Asian incense

There is an aldehydes rich perfume on the stick. Clean linen, nail varnish remover, and freezer ice. Too volatile for comfort. The scent is softer and more welcoming on the burn, though comes with scorched paper notes. On the whole I've not really got on with this stick. It's not an ugly scent - no, it seems to go out of its way to be smooth and pleasing. It feels like Jaygee has aimed for a smooth creamy sandalwood scent, but - for my taste - has gone too far into the smooth and creamy so it presents as too much like a clothes conditioner scent, and doesn't - for me - have enough of the earthy, invigorating, and interesting notes of a natural or oily sandalwood. Your mileage may vary.

Available from Bangalore Incense at 50g for £1.07 ($1.41, 125 Rupees). Bangalore Incense ships internationally. 


Date: Nov 2025   Score: 25
***
   
Jaygee's / Gurugee


Bangalore Incense Store Jaygee's Javadhu

 

Bangalore Incense Store was set up in 2008 by Jaygee Mavalur as an outlet for his Jaygee Industries incense company. He also sells incense under the brand name Gurugee. Jaygee's family have been involved in incense making for 60 years over three generations. 

Javadhu is part of Jaygee's  range of luxury boxes - large, often lavishly or elegantly decorated boxes usually containing flora style incense, or sticks close to that style - rich and heady with oils. They are the most expensive domestic Indian incense, and are not often exported (at least in the luxury box format). The name, Javadhu, alludes to a local Tamil Nadu perfumed powder made from herbs and spices traditionally collected from around the Javadhu Hills in Tamil Nadu. Legend has it that the perfume was developed many thousands of years ago by Bhoga Siddar for Kartikeya, the Hindu god of war; though most academics feel that Bhoga would have lived about a thousand years ago. If there is some truth to the story of Bhoga being the creator of the perfume, then either date would make Javadhu one of the oldest perfume blends in the world - possibly older than Goose Pear Tent.  

The scent on the stick is gorgeous - sweet and spicy with sparkling champagne floral aldehydes and flutters of assorted fruits along with baby powder/talcum powder and some soft savoury gourmand elements. There's a lot going on here, though all in beautiful harmony. I love this! 

The scent on the burn takes a moment or two to settle, but when it does it is an attractive accord. Sadly, does not match the cold throw scent on the stick. Javadhu is a powder perfume, designed to be worn on the body, not to be burned. It appears to me that Jaygee has done a brilliant job of creating a beautiful Javadhu scent on the stick, as though it were the perfumed powder. But hasn't quite caught the formula for the scent when the powder is burned. The scent on the burn is attractive, though is a tad dry and harsh (I have a personal preference for soft, rich, sweet scents). It has a smell and a feel akin to scorched herbs. As I say, given time, the accord does soften, and some of the delightful details from the cold throw scent do come through, and I do like this, but it's not quite the complex beautiful harmony I was hoping for. 

Beautiful scent with a fascinating history. The scent on the burn doesn't quite deliver the promise of the Javadhu perfumed powder, but by itself it's a damn fine accord, and it leaves the room smelling divine. 

Available from Bangalore Incense at 50g for £1.07 ($1.41, 125 Rupees). Bangalore Incense ships internationally. 


Date: Nov 2025   Score: 40
***
   


Wednesday, 25 February 2026

Sky Aromatherapy Variety Pack No. 1

 


Companion to Sky Aromatherapy Variety Pack No. 2 which I reviewed in March 2017. It appears I have had this pack since then, and it's time to dust it off and give it a review. I know that Sky incense products are still for sale, I see them now and again, and my review of the No 2 Variety Pack still gets readers. The sticks are made in Thailand for the Salco Group (who may have just gone out of business). There are four different fragrances - Sandalwood, Opium, Patchouli, and White Musk, each in their own packet, and the four packets are kept in another packet, which is tightly sealed, and has to be cut open. There is an April 2011 date inside the packet. 

The sticks are gaily coloured - very bright and cheerful. There is a light, delicate, fresh perfume on each of the sticks, but the scents are not distinctive. They smell pretty much the same, and I'm not interested enough to work at it to note any differences. 

The orange stick is White Musk. A synthetic scent created by Albert Baur in 1888, and much used since for its clean, inoffensive lines, which are very popular. The scent is clean and light, with an awareness of fresh linen, though also some scorched paper notes from the cheap wood paste used. I am more tolerant these days of such incense as I have burned a lot of Chinese and Japanese incense since 2017 when I reviewed Variety Pack No. 2. However, while I don't find the scent offensive, I don't find it especially pleasant or interesting. 

The green stick is Sandalwood. There's little if any sandalwood scent here. Some white wood, yes, but not fragrant. It's mainly a scorched paper smell. 

Red is Patchouli. Some volatility on the stick - cool, crisp, though more like vinegar than diamonds or frost. Perhaps something floral or linen-like. The scent on the burn is mild smoke.

The purple stick is Opium. Mild plum and musk notes, but mostly burning wood. 

While I am more tolerant of wood based Asian incenses these days, this is still a poor lot. Granted the sticks are old, but I can't imagine that even when fresh that this was a delightful product. Anyway, that's another packet removed from the current clutter on my desk. Given that we have plenty of room freshener type incense for the outhouse where we feed the cats, and much of that is actually quite pleasant, I think I'll skip the outhouse and put these straight in the bin. 


Date: Feb 2026   Score: 19/50
***



Incense Around The World
(Thailand)

Om Sai Om Brand Trishala Chandan Dhoop Sticks

 


These dhoop sticks are companions to the Trishala Chandan joss sticks, which I reviewed in Feb 2024. They are decent low cost everyday synthetic sandalwood which are effective and pleasant room fresheners. 

Scent on the burn is soapy, floral, soft, enveloping, creamy sandalwood, and overall very beautiful. It doesn't smell "natural" - there's no earthiness, this is clean, cool, with linen room-freshener tones. There is likely to be sandalwood powder from Santalum album (usually known as white sandalwood or Indian sandalwood), along with oils - possibly a blend of sandalwood oil and less expensive synthetic oils, which would give the linen notes, and a touch of benzoin to smooth it out and add sweetness - there is a vanilla touch in the accord. It is a very pleasing experience - clean, smooth, and attractive with soft, creamy sandalwood notes.  Though soft, they are a tad smoky, and that can accumulate in a small space, even with ventilation. 

On the whole quite likeable as a room freshener, and good value for money if an everyday sandalwood room freshener is what you are after. 

Available for 55 Rupees (India only) direct from Om Sai Om Brand


Date: Feb 2026   Score:  28/50


Tuesday, 24 February 2026

Pushkar / Vrindavan Ruhe Oud

 

Ruhe or Ruh is traditionally used in incense to signify the essence or purity of the fragrance - it would be used in a similar way to "Pure". So the idea is that this is a pure, natural oud scent. It's not frequently used, though Misbah's Fragrance is one that does, as in Ruh Kasturi, and GP is another, as in Ruh Amber. 

This Ruhe Oud is sold in Pushkar and in Vrindavan by an incense maker somewhere in India. A number of the incense houses in Pune make incense for others, and some do make incense for spiritual cities in India. Other incense houses elsewhere in India also sell incense to Pushkar and Vrindavan, so there are a number of incense houses who could be responsible for this Ruhe Oud. 

Brief Chemistry got in touch with me a few months back to say that he had four sticks, each from a different source, yet all looked and smelled the same. 


Different names and/or shops
but they all look and smell the same

One of the sticks is Sai Handicrafts Oudh, another is Vrindavan Bazaar Blue Lotus? (the question mark is because we are unsure if this is genuinely the incense they sell as Blue Lotus, or if they made a mistake in the packaging), and the other two are this Ruhe Oud. 

I feel that the appearance and scent accord is the same in all the incenses, though the Sai Oudh is slightly different, perhaps due to a different batch. The Sai sample that Brief Chemistry sent me is the same as the pack I have, so the sticks appear to have come from the same batch. I prefer the Sai Oudh - it has a freshness and beauty and interesting details that the Blue Lotus and this Ruhe Oud do not. Plus, there are vanilla notes in this and the Blue Lotus that I didn't pick up in the Sai (perhaps due to the Sai having a stronger dose of oils that subdue the vanilla in the paste base. 

The scent on the stick is aged, mouldy, damp wood with some florals (a slight hint of violets), and faint vanilla. It is lovely, and very engaging. The scent on the burn is softer, and more rounded than the cold throw scent on the stick, which is how the others also behaved. It is a delightful scent. It's a beautiful scent. 


Date: Feb 2026   Score:  40 
***




Vrindavan Bazaar Blue Lotus?

 


Vrindavan Bazaar is a shop in the holy city of Vrindavan selling a variety of Krishna related souvenirs including divine incense.  The shop doesn't make the items they sell. They present the incense as being made by local artisans. Clearly their customers would prefer the incense to be made locally in the vicinity of where Krishna played as a child. That would make the incense more auspicious. However, there is no strong evidence of a notable incense maker in Vrindavan (though Julian of The Incense Atelier has found a maker in Vrindavan he's named True Vrindavan). Much of the incense is made elsewhere, with Pune being a likely source for at least some of it. 

Blue Lotus is a scent strongly associated with HMS in Pune.  HMS have their own branded Blue Lotus, and a number of traders who are known to source from HMS also sell a Blue Lotus, such as Primo Blue Lotus. It is not a traditional Indian incense name, and though there may be other Indian incense makers who produce a Blue Lotus, I've not yet come upon one in my searches. The Blue Lotus incenses I've experienced have a blue paste, and a light and delicate scent informed by vanilla and violets. 

  


This Vrindavan Bazaar Blue Lotus was sent to me by Brief Chemistry, along with some other incense he had bought which he noticed were pretty much the same. I agree with him - the sticks look and smell the same, and are pretty much indistinguishable. His Sai Handicrafts Oudh is a little fatter and stronger/fresher than the others, but when I compare the samples with my pack of Sai Handicrafts Oudh, I find them identical in every respect, including the glittery sprinkles (turn the sticks under a light source and the sprinkles can be seen).  While we can agree that the Vrindavan Bazaar Blue Lotus is the same as Sai Handicrafts Oudh and Pushkar/Vrindavan Bazaar Ruhe Oud (one of the Ruhe Oud packs came direct from Vrindavan Bazaar, the other came from Pilgrims Fair Trade as a Pushkar incense), we are less certain that the Blue Lotus they sent him is the regular Vrindavan Bazaar Blue Lotus, as the sticks on the website are shown as coloured blue, the same as all other Blue Lotus incenses. All theories are possible as to what happened - the VB shop ran out of the regular Blue Lotus, so they randomly sent some other sticks and labelled them Blue Lotus; the shop changed its contract from HMS to some other supplier in Pune who sent a different incense they called Blue Lotus, meanwhile the VB shop continues to use the original picture; or this is just a mix up by the packer. Anyone who has bought from VB will be aware of the charmingly sloppy nature of the shop, such that what you get will rarely be 100% of what you ordered, and you tend to get more stuff than you expected, as they'll throw in an extra packet or two. 

Anyway, what is clear is that Sai Handicrafts, Vrindavan Bazaar, and Pilgrims Fair Trade Pushkar Incense are all selling incense made by the same incense house. And that incense house is in Pune. Though there is some uncertainty if this is the regular Vrindavan Bazaar Blue Lotus, I'll take it as it is until indicated otherwise. 

The scent on the stick is similar to Sai Handicrafts Oudh - rich, oily, resinous, with aged wood and florals, it is slightly softer, with a violets tinge rather than the waxy jasmine I get from the Sai. Also, this has some awareness of vanilla which is not so apparent on the Sai. Essentially the same accord, with minor scent note differences which could happen with batch variation. 

As with the Sai Oudh, the scent on the burn is softer than the cold throw scent on the stick. Quite rounded. Some sense of vanilla, which I didn't get on the Sai, but essentially the same accord. Just a little softer and less present. Woods and florals combine to create a pleasing whole, though the longer it burns the more vanilla I notice. I find this lovely, but, while it seems to me to be essentially the same accord, it is lacking the freshness and clarity of the Sai, such that I'm not picking up some of the delightful details that excited me about the Sai. 

Available at £1.03 for 20gm from Vrindavan Bazaar. They ship internationally at reasonable rates. 


Date: Feb 2026   Score: 40
***

Monday, 23 February 2026

Vinason's (VNS) Ratrani

 


I do like the warm soft retro styling on some of the older Vinason's incenses, like this one and the Dhanashri. These older styles also tend to have a more retro approach to the fragrance - soft, heady, enveloping, and highly perfumed, with a bold accent on the floral. These retro big-perfume florals don't tend to be exported to the West much these days, though they were common in the early Seventies.  Mysore Sugandhi Three Roses and Gateway of India are classic survivors, along with this VNS Ratrani. I love that some importers, such as The Incense AtelierPadma Store, and Everest Trader, are investing in bringing over these classic Indian incenses - they make a vibrant change from the usual soft vanilla of Pune or soft sandalwood of Bangalore.

Ratrani is a night fragrance flower (Cestrum nocturnum)  in the potato family - commonly referred to as lady of the night, night-blooming jasmine, and - mostly in India - as night queen. It is not a native Indian plant, but was brought in during the British Raj as a fragrant ornamental plant, and quickly became popular. 

The cold throw scent on the stick is sweet, perfumed, floral, some icy brilliant aldehydes , a spray of  TCP antiseptic, some ripe plums, and a good dollop of fermentation. It is rich, beautiful, perhaps a tad sharp in places, and quite engaging. I love the scent - my main issue would be that the accord gathers a little too much in the same area - though this tends to be the case for older style Indian incenses. Modern accords, especially since the global success of Satya Nag Champa in the 1980s, have tended to have more balance and contrast because of Nag Champa's engaging contrast of soft creamy sandalwood with sweet yet bright waxy florals in which neither the top nor the base notes dominate, creating a harmonious whole in which base, middle, and top notes are all present at the same time. However, it's refreshing to have an incense that is so intensely focused on one aspect - the floral. My personal preference has always been for more complex and multi-faceted scents rather than single-notes, so this is not a scent that is likely to fly away in my scoring; but, phew, it is brilliantly compelling nonetheless. 

The scent on the burn is less sharp, more rounded, and has a touch of wood. It is, despite being quite heady, a gentle non-invasive scent, though it is a tad smoky. Very likable, with purple notes of violets playing around the fringes. A little too linear for my taste, and the smoky aspect I find off-putting, but all in all an incense I'm happy to burn at any time to fragrance the home. 

Vinason's is available in the UK from TheIncenseAtelier; in Europe from Padma Store (which also has useful samplers); in USA from Everest Trader; and from VNS themselves in India - if you live outside India, contact Shreyas Sugandhi at vns@vnsons.com to place your order and  arrange payment. 


Date: Feb 2026   Score: 32
***


Night Queen