Sandalwood Collection
Naturally aromatic woods valued for balance, stability, and daily wear.
What is Sandalwood?
Sandalwood is a dense aromatic wood — soft, creamy, and stable. Unlike more volatile aromatic woods, it offers consistency over time. A Mysore sandalwood bracelet, for example, is suited to long-term daily wear precisely because of this steadiness.
We select for material maturity, oil development, and grain structure — how a sandalwood bracelet ages with wear, not how it smells on the first day. Over time, the aroma softens and integrates naturally into the wearer's routine.
Two Types of Sandalwood
Understanding aroma, resin, and material structure.

Old Mountain Sandalwood/Mysore Sandalwood
Soft, milky, warm aroma. Higher oil content, smooth surface, balanced scent and texture. Suited to those who value classic aromatic depth.

Small-Leaf Red Sandalwood
Subtle, dry, wood-forward aroma. Dense grain, high durability, visually minimal. Suited to everyday wear and a restrained aesthetic.
Selected Pieces
Mysore Sandalwood Barrel Bead Bracelet-Still · Deep Reserve
$309.00 – $469.00Price range: $309.00 through $469.00Indian Red Sandalwood Bracelet-Still
$169.00 – $259.00Price range: $169.00 through $259.00Sandalwood Beads with Hand-Engraved Silver Script-Trace
$189.00 – $229.00Price range: $189.00 through $229.00Aged Red Sandalwood Beads-Still
$169.00 – $189.00Price range: $169.00 through $189.00Understanding Sandalwood Bracelets
Is sandalwood suitable for daily wear?
Sandalwood bracelets are valued for their stable grain structure and moderate oil content, making them suitable for frequent and long-term wear.
Does sandalwood lose its scent over time?
With regular wear, sandalwood aroma softens gradually rather than disappearing. The scent becomes more integrated and subtle as the wood ages naturally.
Are sandalwood bracelets treated or scented?
Our sandalwood bracelets are not artificially scented. Aroma variations result from natural oil development and material maturity.
The slow growth and high value of Indian Sandalwood have placed it under increasing conservation scrutiny. For more on its status, see the IUCN Red List entry for Santalum album.
Sandalwood exists not for moments of intensity,
but for time.
It is chosen for its ability to remain —
in texture, in aroma, and in daily use.
Not rare by chance,
but refined through consistency.
A material that stays, long after novelty fades.