Ingredients to Avoid in Home & Body Products
Everyday cleaning and personal care products are chock-full of toxins prone to causing harm to both our bodies and our environment—a fact most companies try to conceal.
Lammas™ All-Natural Essential Oil Incense is rich and royal as a mountain lush with sun, welcoming the year's first harvest with a boon of dewey flowers and sweetened woods. Like a garden ripened with months of tending and growth, this blend offers nourishment and repletion. Regale yourself and feast upon the summer's bounty!
essential oil blend (benzoin [Styrax benzoin], bergamont [Citrus bergamia], frankincense [Boswellia sacra], rose [Rosa rubiginosa], rosemary [Rosemarnius officinalis], sandalwood [Santalum album]), charcoal, tree resin, bamboo stick, paint (mineral pigments, natural resins)
Made from plants, not plastics.
Unlike most incense blends, ours contain only pure essential oils. We never use synthetic petroleum-based fragrances that fill your home with airborne phthalates and parabens. These endocrine disruptors can damage our body's natural hormone levels, causing all sorts of short- and long-term issues. Yuck!
We believe in keeping our waterways clean, as well as the air we breathe. Crafted without any chemical preservatives or synthetic fragrances, our incense sticks are made with bamboo-derived activated charcoal that purifies the air as you burn incense. The paint we use for the sticks is clay-based and 100% plant-derived.
Our charcoal incense produces less smoke than other incense, for a gentler experience and more pure aroma from our essential oil infusions. The scent lingers, but doesn't overstay its welcome.
Everyday cleaning and personal care products are chock-full of toxins prone to causing harm to both our bodies and our environment—a fact most companies try to conceal.
Humans dump a whopping 2.12 billion tons of waste into our land, air, and waterways each year—a major environmental issue the zero waste movement is striving to address.
The moon, the sun, and the Earth line up in the sky for a few weeks each year and intersect during a time period called eclipse season.