Ume Handmade Marble Incense Stick Holder

€3.50
  • Handmade Marble mosaic incense holder, available in two sizes, made from high quality materials, branded with gold leaf stamp. This small incense stick holder is perfect for home or travel use. It can be placed on your table top directly, or onto a larger tile. It is perfect to use as a solid stick incense holder.

    Small: Size 2.5cm x 2.5cm x 1cm.
    Large: Size 5cm x 5cm x 1cm.

  • Ume traditional, high grade Chinese incense sticks are made of 100% natural aromatic plant components, bound with water. Each incense stick is 15cm long and burns for around 33 minutes. There are 30 pure incense sticks per box. These Japanese style incense sticks are made without any bamboo core.

  • Ume was founded by Emma Leafe after several influential journeys – visiting temples, sacred places and exquisite tea houses, across the alluring provinces of China. Bringing back to the UK the purest verities of incense and elegant burning accessories, which are essential to Asian culture, yet otherwise are rare to find outside their country of origin. The quality incense is blended using only natural, high grade, fragrant plant material and is inspired by ancient recipes. The raw ingredients of their traditional incense consist of precious medicinal plants, herbs, spices, aromatic tree barks, seeds and saps, they are imbued with thousands of years of development.

    The herbs are sourced from all over the Asian continent, from the countries of South East Asia and Indonesia, to Korea, China and Tibet. The exact composition of these fragrant masterpieces, often take years to achieve. It is this love and passion they have, and look for, in the producers they collaborate with. Their clientele also insist on finest quality ethical products and such integrity is of foremost importance to them when sourcing their materials.

    Ume incense can be used to create a fragrant space for meditation, yoga and relaxation; also to purify the air in the home, office or when travelling. Since ancient times, accompanying calligraphy, tea ceremony and flower arrangement, incense making has been revered as one of the esteemed Chinese and Japanese art forms. In Taoist, Buddhist and folk rituals, incense is used in prayer and to make dedicated offerings in ancestor worship. Ume represents an opportunity to explore such ancient practices, moulding them into a contemporary context.