Monday, December 13, 2010

Incenses and Their Uses

Incenses and Their Uses

Blue Berry - Burn to keep unwanted influences away from your home and property

Blue Roses- Specially crafted to honour the Goddess in all her aspects

Carnations - A sweet floral scent traditionally used for healing

Cherry - Sacred to Venus, this blend will attract and stimulate love

Cinnamon - Use to gain wealth and success

Coconut - Burn for protection and purification

Copal - Sacred to the Mayan and Aztecs, this blend is suitable for honouring the Gods

Frangiapani- Burn to brighten your home with friendship and love

Frankincense - Draw upon the energy of the sun to create sacred space, consecrate objects, and stimulate positive vibrations

Honeysuckle - Burn for good health, luck, and psychic power

Jasmine - For luck in general, especially in matters relating to love

Lotus - For inner peace and outer harmony, to aid in meditation and open the mind's eye

Musk - Burn for courage and vitality, or to highten sensual passion

Myrrh - An ancient incense for protection, healing, purification and spirituality

Passionflower - For peace of mind, this sweet scent will soothe troubles and aid in sleep

Patchouli Patchouli - An earthy scent used in money and attraction spells

Pine - Burn for strength, and to reverse negative energies

Rose - For love magick, and to return calm energies to the home

Sandalwood - A delicious all purpose scent used to heal and protect, also for purification

Spice - A fiery scent to be charged for any magick

Spirit - Raise your personal vibration, attract spirit guides and honour your personal deity

Strawberry - For love, luck and friendship

Tangerine - A solar aroma used to attract prosperity

Temple - A devotional incense for the altar during ritual

Vanilla - Stimulate amorous appetites and enhance memory

INCENSE - Information on how to make

INCENSE - Information on how to make


I have two books on the subject of making incense, one of which is useful and
the other of which is occasionally amusing.  The books are:

The useful one: Smith, Steven R.  _Wylundt's Book of Incense_, York Beach, ME:
Samuel Weiser, Inc. 1989, 300 pp.

The amusing one (which will probably be easier to find, alas):
Cunningham, Scott.  _The Magic of Incense, Oils & Brews_, St. Paul, MN:
Llewellyn Publications, 1986, 165 pp.

There are two kinds of incense: that which will burn by itself, and that which
won't.  The self-burning kind is the stuff formed into cones, sticks, and so
forth.  Non-self-burning incense is easy: mix up whatever herbs please you and
drop it on a hot coal.  You can buy self-igniting charcoal which was made to be
used with incense at either occult shops or ecclesiastical supply shops.  This
charcoal has saltpeter mixed in it, so that when you hold a match to it, the
saltpeter burns and provides enough of a start for the charcoal to catch.  You
get a line of sparks marching across the coal.  I think it's really neat, but
then I'm a bit of a pyromaniac.  Put the coal in a heatproof dish and drop herbs
on it.  The coals usually burn for about an hour.  You can get large clouds of
smoke this way.  On the other hand, the charcoal is both messy and dangerous.
It really does get hot.  I am very careful to put it in something that will
contain both the fire and the heat.  The best solution I've found so far is a
good-sized stone ashtray with a trivet underneath.

Self-burning incense is tricky.  I've had reasonable success with the recipes in
Smith, but not with creating my own recipes.  Do not follow Cunningham's
instructions for making self-burning incense.  He has no clue what he's talking
about.  Use his recipes that please you, and ignore his techniques.

From this point on, unless I say otherwise, I'm referring to self-burning
incense.  Incense requires the following ingredients:

- Aromatic substance: the stink-pretty.  This can be whatever you want.

- Base: a neutral or pleasant smelling substance that burns easily. Fine sawdust
is easy to get and cheap.  Sandalwood works beautifully, but costs more.
- Potassium Nitrate: aka saltpeter.  To make sure it burns.

- Binder: glue, to hold it together.  Smith has a list of necessary features,
such as 'must not revert to powder when dry'.  Gum tragacanth is best.

- Liquid: to make the binder become sticky.  Usually water.

One of the tricks to incense is getting the correct amount of  saltpeter.  Like
I said above, I haven't figured out this one, so I do it by the book.  The other
trick is to get all the ingredients evenly mixed together.  Here's the secret to
doing this: mix the binder in with the base and aromatics, and dissolve the
saltpeter in the liquid. This is why I tell you not to follow Cunningham's
methods.  He tells you to do exactly the opposite (saltpeter with dry
ingredients, binder with liquid).  I tried it his way before I found Smith, and
it Does Not Work.

I strongly recommend Scott Cunningham's Incenses, Oils and Brews from Llewellyn
Publications. Scott has recipes for a wide variety of incenses for various
purposes. Most of these are for powder incenses to be used with charcoal but I
believe he also talks about how to make cones.  I prefer using charcoal myself,
as you don't need to  include any binders or other extraneous ingredients in the
incense. Good luck! Making your own incense is very rewarding and the end
product tends to have better energy than store-bought.

If you prefer making your own cone or stick incense, I suggest using gum
tragacanth, which can be obtained from most herb suppliers.

Start with a tablespoon of the gum and a large (12 ounces) glass of  water. Add
a bit at a time until it is a stiff, paste-like consistency. Add to this your
powdered herbs and/or oils. Remember that your oils will have a stronger odor,
so adjust accordingly.

For stick incense, get some joss sticks from an incense store and simply dip
them in the mixture.

To create cones, make the mixture thicker and shape by hand.

Keep your mixture covered with a damp cloth, else it turns into a hard, unusable
lump.
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