Thyme, Sweet Essential Oil
$45.9
$83.54
Botanical Name: Thymus linalool Botanical Family: Lamiaceae Extraction Method: Steam distilled Part of Plant Distilled: Herb Country of Origin: France Cultivation Method: Organic Composition: 100% Thymus linalool Consistency: Thin Scent Description Spicy, sweet, buttery, and warm, with penetrating notes of wood and herbs. In Living Libations Happy Gum Drops, Happy Gum Drops Ozonated Gel, Happy Gums Paste, Wild Child Happy Gum Drops, Soothsayer Serum, Ensorcell Serum, Frankincense First Friend, Sweet Sleep Serum, and Seabuckthorn Cinnamon Hot Lover Lips. Blends well with Frankincense, Rose Otto, Spikenard, Lavender, Mandarin, Tangerine, Bergamot, Lemon, Marjoram, Silver Fir, Palo Santo, Cardamom, Carrot Seed, and Geranium. ESSENTIAL OIL ANALYSIS > Uses Beautiful in blends, baths, salt pipes, and diffusers. Excellent in skincare serums. Strong as it is soft, Sweet Thyme Essential Oil is known to revitalize body and mind while being mild enough to be used on sensitive skin, young children, and the elderly. This special variety of Thyme is a treasured ingredient in our gentle skincare serums. It is an effective agent of oral care to freshen the mouth and breath and Sweet Thyme also blesses body and mind and fosters focus for creative endeavors. Size: 5 ml and 15 ml Organic Ingredients 100% sweet thyme (Thymus linalool) essential oil. “In this oil the mildness of linalool and linalyl acetate is combined with the strong action of thyme. It is excellent for impurities of the skin… Its gentleness has made it an aromatherapy classic overnight… a pleasant tonic and irreplaceable for skin care.” ~ Kurt Schnaubelt, Advanced Aromatherapy “It is non-irritating and gentle, and especially recommended for treatingchildren and the elderly or infirm.” ~ Jeanne Rose, The Aromatherapy Book: Inhalations and Applications “The essences produced by different species of thyme have noticeable differences in their chemical composition. Some contain a greater proportion of thymol, others of carcavrol and others again of citral (analogous to the essence of verbena). Nevertheless, their properties are closely related.” ~ Jean Valnet, The Practice of Aromatherapy “I know a bank where the wild thyme blows, where oxlips and the nodding violet grows, quite over- canopied with luscious woodbine, with sweet musk-roses, and with eglantine.” ~ William Shakespeare
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