
Incense & aromatherapy
by The Mother's Fragrances
Herbal incense cones are handmade aromatic cones crafted from all-natural plant materials that fill your room with steady, fragrant smoke. Available in four distinct scents — Musk, Lotus, Patchouli, and Lavender — these fair trade cones burn from the tip down, releasing a slow, consistent aroma for around 20–30 minutes per cone. Light one up, sit back, and let the scent do its thing.
Four options, four very different moods. Here's the honest breakdown so you don't end up with something that clashes with your space:
| Variant | SKU | Character | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Musk | SM0311 | Warm, earthy, slightly sweet — the classic base note | Evening sessions, meditation corners, bedrooms |
| Lotus | SM0312 | Soft, floral, clean — lighter than you'd expect | Daytime use, living rooms, yoga spaces |
| Patchouli | SM0313 | Deep, musky-sweet, unmistakably earthy | Anyone who already knows they love patchouli (you know who you are) |
| Lavender | SM0310 | Herbal, fresh, gently floral — the most universally liked | First-timers, shared spaces, winding down before bed |
If you're not sure where to start, grab the Lavender. It's the one we'd hand someone who's never burned incense cones before — pleasant without being overpowering, and it won't divide a room. Patchouli is the boldest of the four; it lingers longer and fills a space more aggressively. Fair warning.
| Specification | Detail |
|---|---|
| Type | Incense cones |
| Production | Handmade |
| Ingredients | All-natural plant materials |
| Sourcing | Fair trade |
| Available Scents | Musk, Lotus, Patchouli, Lavender |
| Approximate Burn Time | 20–30 minutes per cone |
| Smoke Style | Burns from tip downward, steady fragrant stream |
Complete your setup with a proper incense holder or burner — cones need a heat-safe dish underneath, and a dedicated holder catches the ash neatly. If you're into layering scents, our essential oils and aromatherapy range pairs well with these cones for building a proper atmosphere.
Incense cones burn differently from sticks, and that difference matters. A cone concentrates its material into a compact shape, which means the smoke is thicker and the scent fills a room faster — typically within the first 2–3 minutes. You get a more intense burst of fragrance from a single cone than from a stick of similar weight. For small to medium rooms (up to about 20 square metres), one cone is plenty.
These particular herbal incense cones are handmade from all-natural ingredients, which you can actually smell the difference of. Synthetic incense tends to have a sharp, chemical edge that sits at the back of your throat. Natural cones like these produce a rounder, softer smoke. The patchouli, for instance, smells like actual patchouli leaf — earthy and resinous — not like a chemical approximation of it. We've been stocking incense since the shop opened in 1999, and the handmade stuff consistently outsells the mass-produced alternatives for exactly this reason.
The fair trade sourcing is worth mentioning because it's not just a label here. It means the people rolling these cones by hand are paid properly for their work. That matters to us, and based on 25 years of customer conversations, it matters to most of you too.
One honest limitation: cones produce more smoke than sticks. If you're sensitive to smoke in enclosed spaces, crack a window or use these in a larger room. According to a review published in the Journal of Ethnopharmacology, several epidemiological studies found that incense burning showed no harmful effect in moderate use scenarios (PMC2377255). That said, a separate study published in Environmental Science and Pollution Research highlighted that prolonged indoor incense burning in poorly ventilated spaces warrants caution (PMC9058426). The sensible approach: burn in a ventilated room, don't chain-burn 5 cones back to back, and you're fine. According to research published in Scientific Reports, indoor incense burning in excess may induce functional changes in brain activity, so moderation and ventilation are your friends here (PMC7184605).
Compared to backflow incense cones (the ones designed for those waterfall burners), these standard herbal incense cones produce a more traditional upward smoke plume. If you want the visual cascade effect, you need specially hollowed cones. These aren't that — they're straightforward, scent-focused cones that do one job and do it well.
Cones release a thicker, more concentrated plume of smoke than sticks, filling a room faster — usually within 2–3 minutes. They also burn for a shorter period (20–30 minutes versus 40–60 for sticks), making them better for a quick scent session rather than all-day background fragrance.
In a ventilated room and used in moderation, yes. According to a review in the Journal of Ethnopharmacology, several studies found no harmful effects from moderate incense use. Keep a window cracked and limit yourself to 1–2 cones per session.
Check the specific product listing for pack size details. Each cone burns for approximately 20–30 minutes, so even a small pack lasts through multiple sessions.
No. Standard incense cones aren't hollowed at the base, so they won't produce the cascading waterfall smoke effect. You need specifically designed backflow cones for those burners. These cones produce a traditional upward smoke plume.
Patchouli. It's the deepest and most persistent of the four — the scent lingers in fabric and curtains noticeably longer than the others. Lavender is the mildest and most universally pleasant. Musk sits in the middle.
Noticeably, yes. Natural cones have a rounder, softer smoke profile without the sharp chemical edge you get from synthetic fragrances. The trade-off is that natural scents are sometimes subtler — but that's a feature, not a flaw.
Keep them in a cool, dry place away from direct sunlight. Humidity is the enemy — damp cones are harder to light and burn unevenly. A sealed bag or airtight container works well if your space tends to be humid.
Last updated: April 2026
Medical disclaimer. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Consult a qualified healthcare provider before use of any substance.