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Jasmine absolute settles over warm ylang-ylang and a touch of rose geranium: floral, but not the kind that reads powdery.
Press it into your wrists and throat twenty minutes before you leave the house, and by the time you're out the door it's warmed into skin instead of sitting on top of it. It's the last thing you put on, not the first thing anyone notices.
Scent — Jasmine absolute, warm ylang-ylang, a lift of sweet mandarin. Floral and honey-warm, not powdery.
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Ships in 2–5 business days from Utah
A 3.3 oz amber bottle, small enough for a clutch or a carry-on
Five carrier oils go into this one: avocado, jojoba, wheat germ, sunflower, and apricot, carrying jasmine absolute, warm ylang-ylang, rose geranium, and a little sweet mandarin on top. Jasmine absolute earns its place: the flowers are hand-picked at dawn, and it takes on the order of eight million of them for a single kilogram, which is why a few drops read so rich. It isn't a single floral note. It's warm and honey-toned rather than sweet, and it settles into skin instead of announcing itself the second you put it on. Worked into pulse points before you leave, the jasmine has time to soften into something that reads like yours by the time anyone else catches it. It's the kind of floral you put on and forget about, not the kind still doing the talking on your coat at midnight.
Warm three or four drops between your palms, then press into pulse points (wrists, the base of your throat, behind your ears) about twenty minutes before you leave, so the jasmine has time to settle into skin instead of sitting on top of it. For the full body, use eight to twelve drops on damp skin and press rather than rub. It's dry to the touch in about a minute.
Picked & packed by hand from our North Salt Lake warehouse, usually the same business day — arriving in 2–5 business days (no express). Not quite right when it lands? Free returns within 30 days.
What’s in it
A single floral oil goes on flat. This one runs five carriers deep: avocado, jojoba, wheat germ, sunflower, apricot. The jasmine has somewhere to settle instead of just sitting on the skin.

Cold-pressed and heavier in the blend, the part that leaves skin feeling fed, not just coated.
Closest to skin’s own oil, so it sinks in instead of sitting on the surface.
Silky and quick to absorb, the base the jasmine and ylang-ylang ride in on.
How it feels
Pressed into pulse points on damp skin, it's dry within a minute. Nothing left to transfer to a collar or a coat sleeve. What stays is soft skin and a warm, honey-floral trace that reads close, not loud.
Straight answer
Lightweight and quick to sink in. Used the way it’s meant to be, it leaves no greasy film. Here’s the whole trick:
Dry to the touch in about a minute. What stays is the soft, and a warm, honey-floral trace.

The ritual
Warm a few drops between your palms, then press into your wrists, the base of the throat, and behind the ears. Don’t rub.
Twenty minutes or so before you head out, so the jasmine has time to settle and warm on skin.
Cup your hands over your face for one slow breath before you start. That’s where the jasmine lands first.
Make it a set
Complete the ritual
Each piece is also sold on its own.
Questions
Not through a magic ingredient; through the ritual and the scent itself. Jasmine absolute worn at your wrists and throat is memorable in a way people notice, and a considered scent someone compliments is a real, simple lift on your way out the door.
It settles into warm ylang-ylang and a little rose geranium instead of standing alone, so it reads honey-warm and current, not powdery. Pressed into pulse points rather than sprayed, it stays close to skin instead of filling a room.
Avocado, jojoba, wheat germ, sunflower, and apricot oil carry the jasmine absolute, ylang-ylang, rose geranium, and a little sweet mandarin. Wheat germ oil is a natural source of vitamin E, and the scent comes from essential oils, not synthetic fragrance; patch-test first if your skin runs reactive, and check with your provider if you're pregnant or nursing.
Jasmine is one of the safer floral picks for exactly that reason: it reads considered and grown-up rather than a drugstore floral. More than one giver has said it felt thoughtful without being expensive-looking, and at 3.3 oz the amber glass bottle is TSA-friendly enough to pack.
From the Journal
JournalThe after-bath oil stepWarm water, twenty unhurried minutes, then the oil pressed in on the way out, where the body oil finishes the soak.Read
JournalHome sauna routine: the daily ritualEucalyptus, a magnesium soak, and the wind-down. Press the jasmine oil in after, on warm skin.Read
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