Silky Satte Fragrance Oil: A Floral-Spiced Blend for Soaps, Candles and Scrubs

Silky Satte Fragrance Oil is a ready-to-use scenting oil for cosmetic and craft projects, with a fresh, earthy, sweet-floral aroma that suits bath bombs, soaps, scrubs, creams and perfume oils. It is a colourless to slightly yellow liquid meant for external use only, and a little goes a long way.
What Silky Satte smells like
The blend opens with a tart, sweet floral note and settles into a rounded mix of gentle floral, spiced, fruity and mossy tones. It is not a single-note scent, which is exactly why makers reach for it when they want something that feels layered rather than flat. Think of it as a wearable, comforting fragrance that works well in products people keep close to the skin.
Where you can use it
- Bath bombs — adds a lasting scent that releases as the bomb fizzes.
- Cold and melt-and-pour soaps — pairs nicely with floral and woody colour themes.
- Facial and body scrubs — a light, clean fragrance that rinses away.
- Creams and lotions — for a subtle finishing scent.
- Lip balms and lipsticks — use very sparingly and only at cosmetic-safe levels.
- Perfume oils — blend with a carrier such as fractionated coconut oil.
How to use it
Always add fragrance oil as a percentage of your total batch weight, not by guesswork. General starting points for makers are:
- Soaps: around 3% of the total weight is common; test in small batches first.
- Candles: if you use it in wax, 6–8% is a typical range, added at the recommended flash-point temperature.
- Lotions, creams and scrubs: keep it low, usually under 1%.
- Perfume oils: dilute in a carrier oil to a comfortable strength, often 10–20% for a body oil.
Add the fragrance towards the end of your process, once the base has cooled slightly, and stir thoroughly so it disperses evenly. Because this is a concentrated oil, resist the urge to overdose it — too much can cause seizing in soap or a harsh, overpowering scent.
Safety notes worth reading
This is a cosmetic and craft fragrance, not a food flavouring or a medicine.
- External use only. Do not swallow it and do not use it undiluted on skin.
- Keep it away from the eyes; it can irritate. Rinse with plenty of water if contact happens.
- Patch-test any new finished product on a small area of skin before wider use.
- Stay within recommended usage rates for the product type you are making.
- Keep out of reach of children and pets, and store away from open flames.
- Ask for the MSDS and allergen information from your supplier if you sell finished products, as fragrance oils can contain allergens that need labelling.
Buying and storage
Azlok offers Silky Satte Fragrance Oil in sizes from 100 gm up to 20 kg, so you can pick a small bottle to test a recipe or a bulk pack for regular production. Pricing starts at ₹499. Store the oil in a cool, dry place, tightly capped and away from direct sunlight and heat. Kept this way, it has a shelf life of around two years. If the scent weakens or the colour darkens noticeably over time, that is a sign it is past its best.
For consistent results, buy the size you will realistically use within a year, label the bottle with the purchase date, and always run a small test batch before scaling up a new formulation.
FAQ
Can I apply Silky Satte Fragrance Oil directly on my skin?
No. It is a concentrated fragrance oil for external use in finished products. Always dilute it in a carrier oil or blend it into a base like lotion or a perfume oil, and patch-test before regular use.
Is it safe to use in candles?
Yes, fragrance oils are commonly used in candles. Add it at the recommended temperature and stay within a sensible load, generally 6–8% of the wax weight, then test one candle for scent throw and burn quality.
How much should I add to soap?
A common starting point is about 3% of your total batch weight. Because blends behave differently across recipes, make a small test batch first to check for scent strength and any acceleration.
Does it contain colour that will tint my product?
The oil is colourless to slightly yellow. At normal usage rates it usually has little effect on colour, but in very pale or white products a light tint is possible, so test first.
How long does it last once opened?
Roughly two years when stored in a cool, dry place with the cap tightly closed and away from sunlight and heat. Reseal it promptly after each use.
