|
General
- Incense is
composed of aromatic biotic materials. It releases fragrant smoke
when burned.
- The term incense
refers to the substance itself, rather than to the odor that it
produces.
- Artificial
fragrances are normally used in the cheapest forms of incense. They
are usually added to a base formed from charcoal powder.
- Incense has
appeared in many forms: raw woods, chopped herbs, pastes, powders,
and even liquids or oils.
Making
Process
-
Incense making is both an
art, and an ancient tradition in Japan..
It's simple, inexpensive and awakens us to the pleasures of earth's
aromatic treasures and our interconnection with nature.
- Herbal incense is
blended primarily for effect. Scent is the secondary consideration
in many cases, but in "all" cases, the scent is designed for the
burn.
- The process of
making herbal incense without the use of salt peter, or even
charcoal is actually quite easy.
- The dipping
process for your incense sticks is much easier if you have some tall
skinny bottles to hold the liquid while you dip the sticks into it.
Market
- Incense stick
industry created an enterprise for bamboo stick manufacture at
adjoining village. A large number of people employed in bamboo
cultivation and stick preparation.
- The market
information collected focuses on production and sales data, typical
uses in the U.S., and data on candles and incense. There are no
public data on incense manufacturers; private data show at least 26
manufacturers.
- The top five
countries that export incense to the US are India, China, Thailand,
Japan, and Hong Kong.
Entrepreneur who wants the informations
on "Required Ingredients, Manufacturing Process, Studies, Manufacturers,
Suppliers, Markets" can
Order the CD-ROM
Today |