Ritual Knowledge — instructions
How to Light Japanese Charcoal
Japanese charcoal is made from high-quality hardwoods for their density and ability to produce a clean, long-lasting burn. Japanese charcoal takes longer to light and is slower to burn than quick-light charcoal. It produces minimal smoke, and provides a long, even heat that prevents the incense or resin from burning too quickly, allowing for a prolonged aromatic experience. How to light Japanese charcoal using a torch lighter: 1. Place charcoal on screen of brass burner or small pile of sand. 2. Pass flame of torch lighter over Japanese charcoal for 20-30 seconds until a bit of glowing ember can be seen...
A Guide to Using Burning Tools for a Safe, Elevated Resin Incense Ritual
Ritual begins with intention. Tools carry the flame. Working with ritual resin incense is a practice of presence—part scent, part science, part devotion. The tools you choose shape not only how the resin burns, but the atmosphere it creates. When the right elements come together—charcoal, burner, tongs, a heat-proof bowl—they create a container for a clean, steady, refined burn. They allow the resins to open slowly, releasing their medicine in the right amount, at the right pace. This is the quiet architecture beneath every aromatic ritual. Creating an Intentional Resin Incense Setup At the center of your setup is the...
How to Use a Mica Plate
How to Use a Mica Plate for Burning Ritual Resin Incense A slower bloom. A softer vapor. A more intentional ritual. There are tools that refine the ritual. Tools that don’t call attention to themselves, yet shape the entire experience. A mica plate is one of them. Mica is a natural mineral—thin, shimmering, heat-protective. When placed on top of a lit charcoal, it diffuses the heat, lowering the temperature and transforming how ritual resin incense behaves. Instead of a fast, scorching melt, the resin softens slowly. The bloom becomes more refined. The vapor becomes cleaner. The entire experience lengthens, deepens,...