Mitti Attar (Santalum album and Baked Earth) Essential Oil

$30.00
  • Mitti Attar (Santalum album and Baked Earth) Essential Oil

Mitti Attar (Santalum album and Baked Earth) Essential Oil

$30.00

Our Mitti Attar traditional perfume is a distillation of special baked clay earth and rare Southeast Indian Mysore Sandalwood. Petrichor, the scent of the first rain, trapped in a bottle. The unusual long lasting ozonic scent of Mitti Attar is a ready to go cologne or perfume all on it's own. It will also blend beautifully with many other essences. Mitti Attar is a supremely grounding and centering essential oil that can be used in cosmetics, diffused, dotted onto the pulse points or used in a meditative bath. Make a deliberate connection to the earth and the forces of nature with this beautiful Mitti Attar Essential Oil!

Created with ancient Indian methods using a long, labor intensive hydrodistillation process, this earth essence is something to be appreciated and grateful for. An enchanting aroma that is a testimony to natural strength and craftsmanship. Mitti Attar captures the mystical scent of the soil just as it is kissed by the first raindrops of seasonal storms. It is very dear to the Indian people because it is associated with the coming of the monsoon rains that are thought of as the life givers.

    Customer Reviews

    Based on 1 review
    100%
    (1)
    0%
    (0)
    0%
    (0)
    0%
    (0)
    0%
    (0)
    P
    Paris Jaye
    Pure Art

    This is one of those "how have I lived this long without this?" situations.

    The listing description is spot effing on. Ozonic, earthy, rainy, fresh, and even mineral-ish. What's more - it lasts FOREVER!

    3 drops in my diffuser and the aroma travels all around the house...but not like some obnoxious fragrant authoritarian looking to conquer olfactive territory...but rather an elusive and breezy kind of way

    This attar is beautiful, mysterious, and a TRUE work of ART

    (I just wish there were a better way to draw droplets out. Oil gets stuck and waisted in pipettes and sample bottles don't come with orifice reducers. Some are too thick for orifice reducers anyway. The pour method is never ideal... especially with expensive oils. Im just saying...in sample quantities there is nothing to spare so leaving even trace amounts in a pipette is maddening)