
The Azlok Sandalwood Fragrance Oil + Royal Rose Fragrance Oil combo pack gives you two of India's most loved aromas in one purchase, priced at ₹789. These are scent-focused fragrance oils, best suited for candles, melts, soaps, reed diffusers and other DIY projects where you want a warm, woody sandalwood or a full-bodied rose without buying two separate bottles.
Sandalwood brings a smooth, creamy, grounding warmth that most people associate with temples and traditional attars. Royal Rose is soft, floral and slightly sweet. Together they cover both the cosy and the romantic ends of the fragrance spectrum, which makes this combo handy if you make or gift scented products.
What you can use them for
Fragrance oils are concentrated aroma blends made for scenting, not for eating or dosing. Within that scope, they are versatile:
- Candles: Add to soy, beeswax or paraffin wax at the manufacturer's recommended load (commonly around 6–10% by weight of wax).
- Soaps and bath products: Use in cold-process or melt-and-pour soap, bath salts and body scrubs at the supplier's suggested rate.
- Reed diffusers and room sprays: Blend with a suitable diffuser base or carrier for a lasting home scent.
- Potpourri and sachets: A few drops refresh dried flowers, cotton pads or wardrobe sachets.
- Wax melts and simmer pots: Great for filling a room quickly.
Because you have two contrasting notes, you can also layer them. A rose-forward candle with a whisper of sandalwood in the base feels richer than either scent alone.
How to use and blend them
Start small and build up. It is much easier to add more fragrance than to fix an over-scented batch.
- Decide your base first — wax, soap, or a diffuser blend — and check its recommended fragrance load.
- Weigh your fragrance rather than counting drops for consistent results between batches.
- For candles, add the oil once the wax reaches the correct temperature, stir gently for a minute or two, then pour.
- To blend the two scents, try a ratio like 3 parts sandalwood to 1 part rose for a warm, woody feel, or flip it for a floral bouquet with a soft base.
- Cure candles and soaps for the time your recipe suggests so the scent settles and throws properly.
Safety notes worth reading
Treat fragrance oils with the same respect as any concentrated product:
- Do not ingest. These are for scenting products only, not for food or drink.
- Patch-test any leave-on skin product before regular use, and follow safe dilution guidance for the base you are making.
- Keep away from children and pets, and store out of reach.
- Work in a ventilated space and avoid prolonged skin contact with the neat oil.
- Keep away from open flames when handling; the concentrate is flammable.
- If you have sensitive skin, allergies or are pregnant, get advice before using on the body.
Buying and storage tips
A little goes a long way, so even a modest bottle lasts across several projects. To keep both oils smelling their best:
- Store in a cool, dark place away from direct sunlight and heat.
- Keep the caps tightly closed to slow evaporation and scent loss.
- Label your bottles with the purchase date if you decant them.
- Avoid storing near strong-smelling items that could taint the aroma.
The Azlok combo pack is made in India and is a sensible starting point if you are testing scents for a small candle or soap venture, or simply want two dependable home fragrances without committing to large volumes.
FAQ
Are these fragrance oils the same as essential oils?
No. Fragrance oils are aroma blends made for scenting candles, soaps and diffusers. They are chosen for a consistent, long-lasting scent rather than for the plant-derived profile of a pure essential oil.
Can I apply the oils directly to my skin?
Do not use them neat. If a product is meant for skin, dilute it properly in a suitable base and patch-test first. When in doubt, keep these for candles, soaps and home fragrance.
How much fragrance oil should I add to candle wax?
Follow your wax manufacturer's recommendation, which is often around 6–10% by weight. Weighing gives you repeatable results from batch to batch.
Can I mix the sandalwood and rose together?
Yes. Try roughly 3:1 sandalwood to rose for a warm, woody scent, or reverse it for a floral blend with a soft base. Test small amounts before scaling up.
How long will the scent last in a finished product?
It depends on your base, fragrance load and curing time. Candles and soaps usually smell strongest after they have cured fully, so allow the recommended settling period.
