Aromatherapy: Properties of Lemon Oil

An almost universal appeal has been generated for this common scent. Its clean, fresh fragrance lends itself to teas and cleaning products as well as air fresheners and room deodorizers. The essential oil is normally procured from the peel of the fruit. It is interesting that, as aromatic as the fruit is, it takes an incredible amount of raw product to manufacture a small amount of essential oil. For this reason, much of the available lemon oil is actually made up of only a small portion of natural essential added to a synthetic base oil.

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Aromatherapy: Properties of Muguet Oil

This is a little-known variation of lily of the valley. On last researching its origin several years ago, it became apparent that this scent has become obscure enough to have escaped from the minds of many actively working perfumers and aromatherapists. The raw flower from which the essential oil would be derived apparently grows only in a small area in France. Because of its rarity, it is seldom seen in a true essential.

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Aromatherapy: Properties of Mimosa Oil

The vision of a mimosa, with its soft branches and delicate blooms, presents a dreamy picture much attuned with the magickal uses of its essential fragrance. Like the specter of its appearance, the scent of the mimosa carries us somewhere between the worlds of dream and reality to the lands rich with imagination, where poets and prophets dwell.

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Aromatherapy: Properties of Magnolia Oil

Native to the Atlantic and Gulf coast states, the magnolia has taken a place in American history. The scent of this flower is highly favored throughout the South but especially in New Orleans, where it was a treasured fragrance of the women who worked in the Louisiana brothels through-out the first century of American history.

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Aromatherapy: Properties of Myrrh Oil

Myrrh is one of the oldest fragrances employed in therapeutic and ritual aromatherapy pursuits. Its home is in ancient Babylonia and the biblical lands. It was no stranger to the temples of the great Egyptian culture, and was offered equally reverently to the gods who took residence on Mount Olympus. The oil is produced from the yellow-orange gum of the myrrh bush, and has been an especially favored scent for incense in ancient times. Although it is not the sweetest of fragrances (it has a musty, smoky sort of aroma), its sacred nature and ready availability in the cradle lands of religion have made it a key fragrance for perfume as well as religious observance in civilizations past.

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Aromatherapy: Properties of Musk Oil

Originally produced from the musk glands of animals, musk is one of the earliest fragrance aphrodisiacs. Today, with a greater awareness of preserving nature’s balance and an increased kindness to the creatures who inhabit the earth, most available musk oil is synthetic. There are many variations of musk oil on the market. In fact, there is one manufacturer that lists seven different types of musk in its catalog. Most people who utilize the oil settle on one of the more adaptable versions, like sweet musk, and use it in all blends for which it is appropriate. Within my own complement of oils there are two different types of musk oil: sweet musk and earthy musk. (However, I have also come across oils presented as Egyptian musk, black musk, and African musk.) This is largely a matter of personal preference and a desire to be able to fine-tune the resulting blend rather than for absolute necessity.

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