Mysore Sandalwood & White Tea Incense Sticks, 30g
For the moment between tea and silence — Mysore sandalwood and white tea, warm and unhurried, like sitting beside an ancient tree on a clear morning.
There is a particular quality to the combination of sandalwood and white tea that no single material achieves alone: the wood provides body, slow and grounding; the tea provides lift, fresh and luminous. Together they create a fragrance that feels like a place rather than a product — specifically, somewhere still, somewhere that has known both stillness and patience for a very long time.
The Mysore sandalwood opens with its characteristic warmth — creamy, slightly sweet, carrying the sun-warmed quality of old-growth heartwood. It is not aggressive. It settles into the room the way familiar warmth settles into a familiar chair.
Then the white tea arrives: first the newer, fresher notes — something like new buds, the hairlike delicacy of spring growth — and then, underneath, the deeper honey-sweetness of aged white tea. This is not a tea-flavored incense in any superficial sense. It is the aromatic soul of white tea: mellow, honeyed, slow.
In the dry-down, the two fully merge. The separation between wood warmth and tea freshness dissolves, leaving something sweeter and cooler than either alone — a fragrance that lingers without insisting, the kind that makes a space feel inhabited and considered.
Presented in a fresh apple-green tubular case with a white handmade-paper sleeve. The label reads: old-mountain white tea, ancient trees. The green is precise — not decorative, but right. Each pack is 21 cm, 30 g.
Materials: Mysore sandalwood · White tea · 30 g · 21 cm sticks
Burn with a dedicated incense holder. Keep away from drafts for even burn. Store in a sealed container away from moisture and direct sunlight.
Shipping
We ship worldwide. Orders are carefully packaged to protect fragrance and material integrity during transit.
Returns & Exchanges
We accept returns within 30 days of delivery for unused items in original condition.
About Agarwood
Agarwood forms when an aquilaria tree responds to injury by producing a dense, resin-saturated heartwood. The rarer the resin, the deeper the fragrance.
Kynam is the highest grade — soft, oily, complex. Its scent shifts from sweet to floral to woody throughout the day.