MAKING INCENSE STICKS First: when working with incenses/perfume/dyeing use utensils that you never ever again use for cooking - some ingredients are not good to ingest accidentally in your dinner later. Secondly: although I have not had a bad reaction to any of the recipes given below, you, might indeed, so take care with their use. There are available in some supply shops pre-formed 'punks' which you can then steep in the oil combination that you want, let dry and then burn. About 35 drops of oil (approximately 1 tsp/5ml) will soak between 3-8 sticks, depending on how intense you want the scent to be. You will want to turn them so the oil is not just soaked up on one side, but uniformly. Basic recipe is to take some finely powdered sawdust, mix in something to help it smolder a bit - often a resin or other chemical, some herbs or essential oils, form it around a fine split piece of bamboo sliver, and let dry. Be careful of some of the herbs that release small amounts of cyanide when burned, like bay leaves, or any other toxic substance. Also usable for the sawdust are powdered dried flower petals or other herbs. Amounts of sawdust/gums/chemical/herbs/essential oils vary widely depending on what type of incense you are making. To make your own finger formed sticks you want a rather thick paste, but for 'dipped' sticks, you will want a much thinner semi liquid goop that you dip the stick into several times. Since I don't have access to sawdust as fine as I normally want, I went to the kitchen spice bottles, and got dried cinnamon to use. Dried woody spices will substitute nicely for the powdered sawdust - but - since they are not inert, they -will- affect the use of the incense. For instance, the following combination is thought by some to invoke the Goddess of the Greenwood if burned in the spring: 4 parts dried powdered violet leaves 2 parts dried honeysuckle flower petals 1 part fresh mint leaves You are supposed to grind them together, and the liquid from the mint will bind it together. (Since there is no wood in this, it works better as a loose incense burned on charcoal, rather than formed into a stick, but I have done both.) If I were to use dried cinnamon powder as a base, that would very much change the character of the incense. It would smolder more evenly, but.....I have never seen violet -leaf- essential oil, synthetic or otherwise commercially available and that moist spring woodland scent would be lost in the heavy cinnamon base when burned. One of the incenses to increase clairvoyance: 2 parts finely ground gum mastic 2 parts frankincense 3 parts ground cinnamon 2 parts dried lavender flowers 1 part gum arabic assumes that you will heat the gum resins to the melting point in a -heavy- ceramic vessel stirring constantly with a glass rod, remove them from the heat, stir in the other ingredients, then when it is cool enough to touch, you will form it onto the bamboo split. Take great care not to scorch or set aflame the resin while melting it, and take care not to get it so hot that the stuff splatters up at you while you are melting it: lower heat may take longer but is a better choice. The following incense that was thought to be attractive to the God of the Greenwood in the autumn (traditionally burned out of doors) is also not a good one to use cinnamon as a base for: 5 parts dried pine (not spruce or fir) needles gathered from a wild tree 2 parts white sandalwood powder 2 parts powdered Valerian root 1 part cinnamon 3 parts finely ground frankincense 1 part dried cedar bark 1 part dried oak leaves 3 parts dried oakmoss Again, although you heat the resin until it is melted, and then mix the ingredients together, the cinnamon is just a small part of the scent combination. Using it as a base would make it the most pronounced scent and very much change the affect it had. Many of the 'oils' on the market are synthetic in origin, and a good many have been cut with alcohols. There are many folks who insist on only using the pure essential oil from natural organic sources. This does seem to make a difference to some folks, and not much of a one, or none at all to others. YMMV on this. However, one of the techniques for using the gums is to steep them in an alcohol base to turn them into a semi-glue like stuff, rather than heating them to the melting point. If that is what you are doing, the alcohol base becomes useful: you grind the gums into a fine powder, steep in the essential 'oils', then add the sawdust/dried herbs and then form onto the stick. One of the simplest incenses to make using this technique is thought to stimulate the air element by some folks, but frankly, I find this more evocative of the fire element than air: 3 parts finely ground gum mastic 1-2 parts cinnamon 'oil' dried cinnamon powder Steep the gum in the oil in a tightly sealed glass container, shaking several times a week until it is 'melted' and no lumps or grains are visible. Stir in enough cinnamon bark to make a stiff paste, then form into cones or onto sticks. Obviously, this could be used for a basic recipe for other incenses by substituting the various 'oils', either individually or in combination, and substituting other dried ingredients for the cinnamon - just remember that some wood/bark will make the incense smolder at a more even rate than an incense composed of just dried herbs and flower petals. I steeped the resins in the God of the Greenwood incense above in alcohol based vetivert 'oil' which allowed it to be very easily formed into sticks, although it is quite stiff from all the other ingredients. My suggestion is to make incense in the beginning with a single scent in it, and observe your reaction to it. Then check what the books say - you may respond differently to a substance than the folklore found there would suggest. After you have an idea of how you respond, then you can begin working with various combinations. After all, you may have an allergy to, say, carnations or -any- other ingredient, including one of the resin gums. There is another problem with incense recipe books. I have an interest in gardening and botany. When I see a recipe that calls for Deer's Tongue, I know that it is actually calling for the roots/leaves/flowers of a European member of the gentian family, not my locally available Frasera speciosa (I could - possibly- substitute the local plant.) How many folks would be looking for a hunter to bring them some tongue of a deer? How many folks upon seeing an ingredient Khus Khus would go looking for the couscous grain product in the kitchen, unaware that it refers to either the essence of a particular musk deer's glands or a relative of North American Sweet Grass used by Native American bands/tribes? There are other ingredients that are given 'pet' names, names that are not known outside of a specific tradition, so even if you have a recipe, it may not be as straight forward as it looks on the surface. I have seen numerous books that say that 'bay salt' is sea salt, instead of salt that has had numerous fresh bay laurel leaves stored in it in a tightly sealed container for several months until the salt smells of bay leaves. You need to do a bit of research in several areas before you begin making incense from some of the traditional recipes if you want to avoid some of the pitfalls - which in part explains why some groups don't encourage exploration into incense making by beginning students.