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Sandalwood & Santal Candles

Sandalwood & Santal Candles

Sandalwood candles burn warm and dry, creamy wood that fills a room slowly and never turns sweet. These sandalwood and santal candles span pure single-note woods, warm amber pairings, and soft musky blends built on one deep accord.

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FROM MYSORE TO MUSK

Sandalwood and Santal Candles: The Same Wood, a Dozen Interpretations

Santal is simply the French word for sandalwood, which is why a santal candle and a sandalwood candle are, at the source, the same wood: Santalum album, the prized Indian species from regions like Mysore. True Indian sandalwood was harvested so heavily that it is now listed as vulnerable on the IUCN Red List, and its export from India is tightly restricted, which is part of why these candles cost what they do. At our West Hollywood counter, shoppers use santal and sandalwood interchangeably, and we rarely correct them.

The range at Candle Delirium runs from pure to blended. For single-note wood with nothing in the way, the Carriere Freres Sandalwood candle names the species right on the label, Santalum album, and smells like it: dry, milky, almost meditative. When customers want warmth around the wood, we point them to the amber and sandalwood candle from Cereria Molla, which wraps the base in resin and reads cozier. The Diptyque Santal candle sits at the top of the range and is the one most shoppers already have in mind.

Our own house line, Delirium, was built in Los Angeles by founder Anthony Carro, and its Santal Accord candle ($58) is the most literal reading of this category: sandalwood, cedarwood, amber, and dry musk, with nothing layered on to distract from the wood. For the full breakdown of how it stacks up against the imports, our guide to the best santal candles ranks the field and explains why the gap between a $39 santal and a $90 one is mostly about the wood, not the label. After more than twenty years of selling this category, that is the first thing we tell every new santal buyer.

Sandalwood and Santal Candles: Scent, Origin, and How to Choose