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Browsing by tag: incense

Home fragrance: Shoyeido Baika-ju (Plum Blossoms) Incense Sticks

Posted by Kevin on 18 June 2006 9 Comments

Plum tree blossomsEvery spring I visit an “old friend” at Kubota Garden in Seattle: a stately Chinese plum tree. If I sit against its large trunk, I’m completely hidden from view by its flower-covered branches that touch the ground. The scent of the thousands of white plum blossoms changes over time. The tiny round unopened buds smell fresh and leafy with a whiff of rain. At their peak, the flowers diffuse a strange and lavish perfume with hints of honey, clove, old-fashioned bubblegum, wood smoke and masa. As the flowers fade and begin to fall, their last breath smells of delicate incense.

It is this final stage of the plum flower’s existence that is evoked by Shoyeido’s Baika-ju (Plum Blossoms) Incense…

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Terre d’Oc Incense ~ home fragrance report

Posted by Kevin on 20 May 2006 9 Comments

Terre d'Oc incenseAround the world, incense is burned to commemorate people and events, to give thanks, to worship, to celebrate joyous occasions, and to purify the air. Watching the glowing incense sticks and their gentle whorls of smoke, and inhaling the luscious aromas of the heated resins and fragrant oils evokes memory, far-away places and ancient rituals. The 'art of incense' combines the ceremonial with the sensual, contemplation with languor.

Terre D'Oc, based in Provence, produces incense sticks and cones in subtle floral, spice and wood aromas…

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Comme des Garcons Zagorsk, and some final thoughts on the incense series

Posted by Robin on 11 January 2006 22 Comments

Comme des Garcons Incense series

The last fragrance (alphabetically) in the Incense series by Comme des Garçons is Zagorsk. If you are not familiar with this series, see Monday’s review of Avignon & Jaisalmer and yesterday’s review of Kyoto & Ouarzazate for an introduction.

Zagorsk was the Soviet-era name for the town of Sergiyev Posad. The town, which is not far from Moscow, is home to the Holy Trinity Monastery of St. Sergius, often called the spiritual center of the Russian Orthodox Church. The symbolism of incense in the liturgy is essentially the same as it is in the Catholic Church: it represents purification, an offering, and the rising of prayers to heaven…

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Comme des Garcons Kyoto & Ouarzazate, from series 3: incense

Posted by Robin on 10 January 2006 56 Comments

Comme des Garcons incense fragrance series

Kyoto & Ouarzazate are two of the five fragrances in the Incense series by Comme des Garçons, which was released in 2002. If you are not familiar with this series, see yesterday’s review of Avignon & Jaisalmer for an introduction.

Kyoto pays tribute to the incense culture in Japan, where incense is a traditional part of both Shinto and Buddhist practices, and in earlier times was also used a time measuring device. Kodo, the Japanese incense ceremony, originated in Kyoto. Like the better known tea ceremony, it is a combination of social gathering and art form. During the ceremony, the incense woods are heated at a low temperature, so that the aroma is released with little or no smoke…

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Comme des Garcons Avignon and Jaisalmer, from series 3: incense

Posted by Robin on 9 January 2006 9 Comments

Comme des Garcons Incense Series

Comme des Garçons launched Series 3: Incense in 2002 with five unisex fragrances, each one painting an “olfactory portrait of a particular milieu” in the incense tradition (via Women’s Wear Daily, 1/4/2002). It is easily my favorite series from this house. All five of the fragrances are interesting but also very wearable, and several of them are downright gorgeous.

Avignon in the south of France was historically an important center of religious activity within the Catholic Church, and was the Papal seat for part of the 14th century. The use of incense in the liturgy has its roots in ancient Hebrew practices, and is traditionally a symbol of purification and of the rising of prayers to heaven. The fragrance has notes of Roman camomile, myrrh, cistus oil, elemi, incense, patchouli and vanilla…

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