Featured Fall Products
Top Essential Oils for Fall
1 | Cinnamon (Bark)
Our cinnamon is steam-distilled from the very thin, smooth bark of Cinnamomum zeylanicum trees grown in Sri Lanka. These trees are indigenous to Sri Lanka and are now commonly grown in Madagascar. It is a tropical evergreen tree in the laurel family that can grow up to 45 feet tall in the wild. The tree has a highly fragrant odor and is commonly used in small amounts as a spicy addition to creams, lotions, and soaps.
Cinnamon is a favorite spice and essential oil because it is reminiscent of baked goods, chocolate covered candies, and has lots of practical uses. This essential oil also makes its debut in our cleansing and protective blends. It brings a natural warmth and spice that’s sure to uplift and rejuvenate wherever it goes! Try blending cinnamon with Frankincense, Lavender, Cedarwood, Orange, Lemon, Neroli, Ylang ylang.
2 | Nutmeg
If you like pumpkin pie, then you’re very familiar with nutmeg! But do you know where it comes from? The fruit of the Myristica fragrans tree produces two different spices. The red outer shell, when dried, becomes mace. The inner nut is nutmeg. Our nutmeg essential oil is steam-distilled from these nuts grown in Indonesia.
Nutmeg is a potent warming oil, and in very small quantities can help to revitalize and warm through application or massage. Aromatically, nutmeg brings warmth and a deep scent of spice. Diffuse, mix into blends, or apply in 2-5% dilution. Like its powdered counterpart, Nutmeg essential oil pops when combined with others. It does well when blended with Lavender, Clary Sage, Geranium, Orange, Black Pepper, and other spice-derived oils.
3 | Clove (Bud)
The word clove comes from the Latin word clavus, meaning nail. Look at a clove bud and you’ll see that the way the shaft and head form make most clove buds look just like nails. During the 16th and 17th centuries, clove and nutmeg were among the most precious of commodities. In Europe they were even worth more than their weight in gold! Our clove oil is steam-distilled from the dried buds of Syzygium aromaticum trees grown in Indonesia. The buds are harvested from the tree before they open then dried.
This well-known smell blends well with tons of spices like Cinnamon Bark, Nutmeg, and Rosemary as well as Citronella, Grapefruit, Lemon, Orange, Peppermint, and Rose.
4 | Anise
Anise is a common spice that comes from small to medium evergreen trees of the magnolia family. These trees can stretch up to 8m (26ft) tall with lanceolate (skinny oval shaped) leaves and beautiful yellow or pinkish red flowers. The fruits are harvested before they ripen, then sun dried. As the traditional name suggests, star anise is star shaped, radiating between five- and ten-pointed boat-shaped sections. These hard sections are seedpods. Tough skinned and rust colored, they measure up to 3cm (1-1/4”) long. Our anise is steam distilled from the Illicium verum trees grown in China today.
Sometimes anise oil will crystallize at cool temperatures due to the anethole content in the oil. The Japanese plant the tree in their temples and on tombs and use the pounded bark as incense. Homeopaths can prepare tinctures from the seeds. Anise has a powerful and licorice-like scent that is fresh, sweet, and spicy. It blends well with Lavender, Pine, Orange, Clove, and Cinnamon.
4 | Dragon's Breath
Diffuser Blends for Fall
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That one
Maybe this one
Or that one
Our Fall Favorites
We asked everyone in the office to find out the fall favorites.
Fall Essential Oil FAQs
How do I get my favorite fall smells? ▼
Lucky for you, many popular autumn spices are made into essential oils. That means you can enjoy your favorites like Cinnamon, Clove, Nutmeg, Anise, and more in pure essential oils! Also, try out our seasonal blend Holiday Cheer. We loved the experience of fall and winter holidays so much that we captured it and put it in a bottle using 100% pure essential oils.
Is Lavender a fall scent? ▼
Whatever floats your boat! If you like the smell of gracious purple lavender in the winter time, you can have it! Just grab a bottle of our Lavender essential oil and add it to your daily routine. Make it into a perfume or room spray, put a drop on your pillow, diffuse it, or put some on your skin. Many of our fall favorites blend well with florals like lavender, so try it out!
What oil smells like cinnamon? ▼
There’s this really cool essential oil that smells just like cinnamon! Guess what? It’s Cinnamon. Check out our cinnamon essential oil steam distilled from the bark of trees grown in Sri Lanka. Add it to soaps, creams, or lotions. And if it gets spilled into a batch of your favorite cookies, don’t be upset! Cinnamon has always been a favorite spice! Also, check out what’s known as Chinese cinnamon or Cassia. It’s a cousin to cinnamon, so close in smell and color that it is sometimes mistaken as cinnamon.
What essential oils make it smell like fall? ▼
Any spice-derived oils like Anise, Clove, Cinnamon, or Nutmeg are reminiscent of spiced cider, pumpkin pie, and all things fall! If you want a combination of these oils that’s tried and true, check out Holiday Cheer our seasonal essential oil blend!
Fall Blog Posts!
Fall Spa Day
Who doesn’t love indulging in some luxurious spa treatments? It’s the perfect way to relax and refresh yourself so you can bring your best to
Scent Spotlight – Calming Core
The holiday season is upon us! This means people gathering for special days like Thanksgiving, Christmas, New Years, and more! Of course, no such holiday
Giving Thanks! Cornucopia Essential Oils
Halloween kicked off the end of the year holidays. Thanksgiving, the next major holiday, is practically here. A time to reflect on everything you’ve been
Scent Spotlight – Nutmeg
If you think about the classic scents of fall, the smell of crisp cool air and baked goods are probably some of the first ones
Spicy Fall Favorites
It’s the season of back to school, sweater weather, and pumpkin spice. Crispy leaves make satisfying crunching sounds underfoot, cold, fresh air nips at noses,
Scent Spotlight – Cinnamon
When the weather cools, the first thing we tend to do is to reach for something warm. Hot cider, hot chocolate, cozy sweaters, heavy blankets,
Fun Fall Festivities
- Carve a Pumpkin
- Bake a Pie
- Rake Some Leaves
- Pick Pinecones
- Make Caramel Apples
- Tell Ghost Stories
- Bake a Cobbler
- Gather Around a Campfire
- Jump in a Leaf Pile
- Go Stargazing
- Track a Harvest Moon
- Forget Daylight Savings (Nov 7)
- Pick Apples
- Eat Some Soup!
- Photoshoot in the Forest
(be safe and stay warm!) - Go Bird Watching
- Make Some Wassel
- Have a Backyard Barbeque
- Smash or Drop a Pumpkin
(not your neighbors, please!) - Have a Pie Eating Contest
- Decorate Pumpkins
- Drink Spiced Cider
- Get a Pumpkin Themed Treat
- Make Chocolate Dipped Pretzels
- Diffuse a Favorite Fall Scent
- Light a Fire
- Watch a Movie
- Snuggle on the Couch
- Practice Thanksgiving Cooking
- Drink Hot Chocolate
- Eat Halloween Candy
- Start Holiday Shopping
- Tailgate at a Sports Event
- Give Warm Hugs
- Pull Out Your Winter Wardrobe
- Smell the Rain