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Lilac & Lilies Fragrance Oil: How to Use It in Candles, Soaps and Diffusers

By System Administrator
July 4, 2026
Lilac & Lilies Fragrance Oil: How to Use It in Candles, Soaps and Diffusers

Azlok Lilac & Lilies Fragrance Oil is a floral scent oil made for craft and home fragrance projects — you add small measured amounts to candle wax, soap base, diffuser bases, incense or reed diffuser blends to give them a fresh, long-lasting bloom of lilac and lily. It is designed for scenting products, not for drinking or applying neat to skin. A 100 GM bottle starts at ₹429, and larger packs go up to 20KG for bulk makers.

What Lilac & Lilies Fragrance Oil smells like

This is a soft, springtime floral. Lilac brings a sweet, slightly powdery top note, while lily rounds it out with a clean, green freshness. The result sits well in bedrooms, bathrooms and living rooms, and it works nicely in gifting ranges where you want something pretty but not overpowering. Because it is a fragrance oil (a blend crafted for performance), it holds its scent longer than many natural florals and stays consistent from batch to batch.

Where you can use it

  • Candles: soy, paraffin, beeswax or blends.
  • Soaps: melt-and-pour and cold-process bars.
  • Reed diffusers and room sprays: mixed into a suitable carrier or diffuser base.
  • Incense: dipping or blending into unscented sticks and cones.
  • Personal care and home fragrance projects: lotions, wax melts, potpourri refreshers and similar.

How to use it: rough dosage guide

Always weigh your fragrance rather than guessing, and follow the recipe for your specific base. As a starting point:

  • Candles: around 6–10% of the wax weight, depending on what your wax can hold. Add at the correct temperature for your wax and stir well for a minute or two so it binds evenly.
  • Melt-and-pour soap: roughly 1–3% of the soap weight, added once the base is melted and slightly cooled, then poured quickly.
  • Cold-process soap: follow your recipe and test a small batch first, as some florals can behave differently at trace.
  • Reed diffusers: typically 15–25% fragrance in a proper diffuser base.

Whatever you make, start with a small test batch, note your percentages, and cure candles and soaps fully before judging the scent throw.

Safety notes worth reading

Fragrance oils are concentrated, so handle them with a little care:

  • Keep away from children and pets, and store away from open flames.
  • Do not ingest, and do not apply the undiluted oil directly to skin.
  • If you are making leave-on skin products, follow safe usage levels and patch-test the finished item.
  • Work in a ventilated space and wipe up spills promptly.
  • Use non-reactive containers and utensils, and keep the oil away from your finished wick before lighting a candle.

If you sell your products, check the fragrance percentage limits for each application and label your goods responsibly.

Buying and storage tips

Choose your pack size by how much you actually make. The 100 GM bottle is ideal for trying a new scent or a weekend batch, while 500 GM and 1KG suit regular hobbyists. The 5KG, 10KG and 20KG options are meant for small businesses running production runs. Azlok stocks Lilac & Lilies in all these sizes so you can scale up without switching suppliers and risking a scent mismatch.

To keep the oil fresh, store it in a cool, dark place with the cap tightly closed. Heat, direct sunlight and air exposure can weaken any fragrance over time. Keep it away from the wax or base until you are ready to blend, and label your bottle with the purchase date so you rotate older stock first.

FAQ

Can I apply Lilac & Lilies Fragrance Oil directly on my skin?

No. This is a fragrance oil for making products, not a perfume for direct use. If you want a skin product, blend it at safe levels into a proper formulation and patch-test the finished item first.

How much fragrance oil should I add to candles?

A common range is 6–10% of the wax weight, but check what your specific wax can hold. Weigh the fragrance, add it at the right temperature, stir thoroughly, and cure the candle before testing.

Is it suitable for cold-process soap?

It can be used in cold-process soap, but floral fragrances sometimes behave differently at trace. Always run a small test batch to check how it performs before making a large one.

Which pack size should I buy?

Pick 100 GM to sample, 500 GM or 1KG for regular hobby making, and 5KG and above for bulk or business production. Buying the same fragrance in larger packs keeps your scent consistent.

How long will the fragrance last?

Kept sealed in a cool, dark place, it stays usable for a long time. Poor storage — heat, light and air — is what fades a fragrance fastest, so close the cap tightly after every use.

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fragrance oillilac and liliescandle makingsoap makinghome fragrancediy supplies

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Lilac & Lilies Fragrance Oil: How to Use It in Candles, Soaps and Diffusers - Azlok Blog