Watch the smoke gather, cool, then slip down through your burner like a small indoor waterfall. These Nag Champa backflow incense cones are made for a dedicated backflow incense holder, pairing Satya’s well-loved fragrance with slow, moving theatre for a quiet corner, evening ritual or screen-free pause.
The backflow effect
The hollow channel in each cone lets cooled smoke sink instead of rising, creating the cascading effect backflow burners are known for.
Use them with a proper backflow burner, where the smoke can travel down steps, pools or carved channels.
The pleasure is partly visual: a few minutes of still watching as the smoke gathers and falls.
Lighting matters. A dim shelf, side table or meditation space lets the pale smoke show more clearly.
They are different from standard incense cones, which do not create the same waterfall effect.
Nag Champa in the room
Nag Champa has a soft, devotional character, the kind of incense people often associate with yoga studios, meditation spaces and quiet evening rooms. Here it feels warm, lingering and gently floral, with enough presence to make the burner feel like part of the atmosphere rather than a simple fragrance source.
Handmade incense from India
These Satya backflow dhoop cones are handmade in India using scented oils and extracts. The cones are designed for downward smoke flow, so the form matters as much as the fragrance. Place one correctly on a backflow holder and it becomes a small moving sculpture, with scent rising around the room while the smoke pours down through the burner.
How to use them well
Place one cone on a dedicated backflow incense holder, with the hole aligned to the burner’s smoke channel. Light the tip, let it catch, then gently blow out the flame so the cone smoulders.
Use on a stable, heat-resistant surface, away from draughts, fabrics and open windows. Keep out of reach of children and pets, and never leave burning incense unattended. After use, let the cone and b…
region of manufacture: India