Safety Guide

Craft safely, breathe easily

Incense making is a rewarding and generally safe craft, but it involves fire, fine powders, and hot surfaces. A few sensible precautions will keep you safe and let you focus on the creative side. Read through these guidelines before you begin. Most of these points are common sense, but they're easy to overlook in the excitement of blending your first batch.

Ventilation

Proper airflow is the single most important safety consideration in incense making. Grinding resins, woods, and dried herbs produces fine particulate matter that can irritate your lungs, throat, and eyes. Even materials that smell wonderful as whole pieces can become unpleasant or harmful when reduced to airborne dust.

When grinding small amounts for a single blend, working near an open window is usually sufficient. For larger batches, anything more than about 50 grams of material, move outdoors or to a well-ventilated garage or workshop. This is especially important when grinding resinous woods like cedar or camphor-containing materials, which release volatile compounds as they're broken down.

When burning incense for testing, keep the room ventilated as well. A single charcoal disc with a small amount of incense can fill a closed room with dense smoke surprisingly quickly. Open a window on the opposite side of the room from your burner to create a cross-breeze that carries smoke away from your face.

Practical Tip

If you do a lot of grinding indoors, a small desktop fan pointed toward an open window can dramatically improve airflow. Position yourself between the fan and the window so that dust is drawn away from you.


Respiratory Protection

A dust mask is essential when grinding large batches. An N95-rated mask is recommended because it filters out fine particles that a simple cloth or surgical mask would let through. This is especially important when working with cinnamon bark, which produces an intensely irritating dust that can trigger prolonged coughing fits, and certain woods like cedar that release compounds harmful to the airways.

Even with a mask, avoid grinding in enclosed spaces without ventilation. Masks reduce your exposure but don't eliminate it entirely, and fine powders can settle on skin, clothing, and surfaces where they continue to become airborne when disturbed.

Important

If you grind incense ingredients regularly, pay attention to any persistent cough, throat irritation, or shortness of breath. These symptoms suggest your ventilation or respiratory protection is inadequate. Chronic exposure to fine wood dust is a recognized occupational hazard; take it seriously even in a hobby context.

Very fine powders, particularly makko and pre-ground sandalwood, can become airborne simply from pouring or stirring. Handle them gently and avoid creating unnecessary dust. Pouring powders slowly and close to the bowl reduces the plume of fine particles that rises into the air.


Fire Safety

Fire is inherent to incense. Whether you're lighting a charcoal disc, testing a cone, or burning a stick, you're working with open flame and extremely hot surfaces. Respect this, and you'll never have a problem.

Critical Warning

Charcoal discs reach temperatures above 600°C (1,100°F). They will burn through wood, scorch stone countertops, and melt plastic. Always use a heat-proof vessel (a ceramic bowl, a proper incense burner, or a metal dish) and place it on a stable, non-flammable surface. A bed of sand or ash (at least 2 cm deep) beneath the charcoal is essential to insulate the vessel from the extreme heat.


Burn & Heat Safety

Burns are the most common injury in incense making, and they almost always happen through momentary carelessness. Most are easily avoided.

Hot Honey and Neri-Koh

When making neri-koh (Japanese kneaded incense), you'll heat honey to blend it with powdered ingredients. Hot honey is deceptively dangerous: it retains heat far longer than water, and its sticky consistency means it clings to skin on contact, prolonging the burn. Work carefully, stir slowly, and never rush the heating process. If honey gets on your skin, run the affected area under cool water immediately.

Charcoal Burns

This is the most common beginner mistake. A charcoal disc that looks grey and spent can still be hot enough to cause a serious burn. After use, leave charcoal discs in their heat-proof vessel to cool completely; this can take two hours or more. Never dispose of charcoal in a waste bin until you're certain it's fully cooled. When in doubt, leave it overnight.

Practical Tip

Keep a dedicated metal tin or ceramic dish as a "cooling station" for used charcoal discs. This keeps them contained while they cool and prevents accidental contact. A thin layer of sand in the bottom of the tin adds extra insulation.

Hot Vessels

The burner or bowl holding your charcoal will also become extremely hot. Ceramic and stone vessels can retain heat long after the charcoal has been removed. Don't move a burner while it's hot. Wait for it to cool, or use oven mitts if you must relocate it.


Allergens & Sensitivities

Natural doesn't mean hypoallergenic. Many traditional incense ingredients can cause reactions in sensitive individuals, ranging from mild skin irritation to respiratory distress. Knowing which materials to watch out for helps you avoid unpleasant surprises.

Common Irritants

Important

When working with any new ingredient for the first time, test a small amount before committing to a full batch. Burn a pinch on charcoal in a ventilated area and observe how you feel over the next hour. If you experience headaches, nausea, skin irritation, or breathing difficulty, discontinue use of that ingredient.

If you make incense for others, always disclose your ingredients. What's harmless to you could cause a reaction in someone else. This is especially important if any of your blends contain cinnamon, camphor, or nutmeg.


Safe Storage

Proper storage protects both the quality of your ingredients and the safety of your household. Most incense materials are stable and low-risk, but a few require extra care.

Safety Note

Saltpeter (potassium nitrate), used in some stick and cone recipes as a combustion aid, is an oxidizer. Store it in its original container, away from heat sources and flammable materials. Keep it out of reach of children. While the small quantities used in incense making pose minimal risk, treat it with the same care you'd give any chemical reagent.


Children & Pets

Incense making involves several hazards that are particularly dangerous for children and animals: open flame, extremely hot surfaces, fine powders that shouldn't be ingested, and small objects that could be swallowed.

Practical Tip

If you have children who are interested in incense making, let them participate in the safe steps: measuring whole ingredients, mixing pre-ground powders, and shaping neri-koh. Keep them away from grinding, fire, and hot surfaces until they're old enough to handle these safely.