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Incense & Smoke — Five plants of the warm sacred. Imphepho, Palo Santo, White Sage, Copal — to hold a space and mark it.

RITUAL ✷ · SUBCATEGORY

Incense & Smoke.

Five plants of the warm sacred. Imphepho, Palo Santo, White Sage, Copal — to hold a space and mark it.

The space held by smoke.

Before there were words to describe the sacred, there were smokes. Incense in temples, imphepho on thresholds, copal in Mayan houses — smoke has always been the mobile frontier between two orders of the world.

Five incense plants in this family, each with its own gesture: Helichrysum odoratissimum Zulu for the ancestors, Bursera graveolens Peruvian for thresholds, Salvia apiana Californian for clarity, Protium copal Mexican for invocation.

INFUSE seeks to name the lineage of each plant with as much transparency as possible — and to say honestly what we do not yet document. No industrial sticks, no reconstituted powders: leaves, barks, natural resins.

3 treasures in this family

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⊹ WHY THIS FAMILY ⊹

Lighting your smoke offering with respect.

Three essential gestures:

First: name the intention before lighting. Smoke carries what is said, not what is silenced.

Second: let the room breathe — open window for 5 minutes after. Fumigation is a cycle, not a saturation.

Third: give thanks. Each plant gives its resin; the gesture of gratitude closes the circle.

Read the fumigation guide

Freshly harvested Imphepho

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Encens & fumigation — RITUAL ✷ | I Infuse · INFUSE