Blend: Coffee and a Smoke
COFFEE. TOBACCO. ALCOHOL. Gosh darned, you need this right now! Together with magnolia, these elements create a layered fragrance that is warm, earthy, slightly sweet, and subtly smoky. Transport your battered mind to a cozy café with this aroma of freshly brewed coffee mingling with the faint scent of tobacco and floral undertones. This blend can be both comforting and invigorating, making it a unique olfactory experience.
The fragrance of a Coffee and Smoke Essential Oil Blend combines several distinct notes to create a one-of-a-kind experience:
Coffee: The warm and inviting scent of freshly brewed coffee beans is energizing and familiar.
Tobacco: The deep, earthy, sweet and somewhat smoky aroma adds a touch of complexity and depth to the blend.
White Jade Magnolia: The delicate and sweet floral scent with a hint of citrus contrasts with the darker, richer notes of coffee and tobacco, adding a fresh and uplifting aspect to the blend.
Alcohol: Here, hair-of-the-dog that bit you has dissolved the resinous tobacco and contributes a certain brightness and astringency to the overall fragrance profile.
HOW TO USE ANARRES' ESSENTIAL OIL BLENDS
Anarres' 100% essential oil blends are composed and crafted from the purest ingredients nature has to offer by Tracey TieF, CNHP, and Registered Aromatherapy Health Practitioner.
The carefully curated blends are not only a sensory delight but are formulated for specific purposes for the health of mind, mood, body, and spirit. Treat yourself to the affordable luxury of a 100% natural blend
~ a few drops in water in a diffuser
~ 20% to create a perfume
~ 3-6 drops in running water for a bath
~ 3-6 drops in your bath salts.
Smell it straight out of the bottle, or place a few drops on a terra cotta pendant to surround your personal space with the healing scent, diffused by your body's own heat. Learn more about How to Diffuse essential oils with a Terra Cotta Pendant
10 ml blend in a blue glass bottle with white driplulator cap.
Photo thanks to Elin Danielson-Gambogi, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons
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