0
Sun Gold Daisy Essential Oil
Sun Gold Daisy Essential Oil

Sun Gold Daisy Essential Oil

Regular price
$24.00
Sale price
$24.00
Regular price
Back Soon!
Unit price
per 
Shipping calculated at checkout.

View or Download Certificate of Analysis

Sun Gold Daisy Essential Oil captures the sunny blooms and delightfully earthy essence of charismatic chrysanthemum flowers. This warm, lively aroma sets a-light green, floral perfumes and fresh, clean colognes with herbaceous top notes. The essential essence of verdant life softly stimulates the mind with calm concentration.

Botanical Name: Chrysanthemum morifolium
Botanical Family: Asteraceae
Extraction Method: CO2 extraction
Part of Plant Distilled: Flower petals and stems  
Country of Origin: Bulgaria
Cultivation Method: Organic
Composition: 25% Chrysanthemum morifolium + 75% Organic Biodynamic Alcohol
Consistency: Medium viscosity with a light yellow color.
Scent Description: Ethereally earthy and faintly floral with clean, complex top notes and hints of honeyed hay.
Blends well with: Rose, Geranium, Clary Sage, Cedar, Citron, Bergamot, Grapefruit, Lemon, Cilantro, Cardamom, Sandalwood, Spikenard, Jasmine, Tuberose, Violet, Patchouli, Greenland Moss, and Mitti Attar.
Uses: Ready to go as a stand-alone perfume or cologne. Glaze the hair with a drop on a brush or wood comb. Perfect on pulse points.  Add to a diffuser or under the nose for brightness and concentration.

 

This hardy favorite is a perennial plant in temperate regions, beloved for its sunny disposition in the garden. In Traditional Chinese Medicine and Ayurveda, the dried flower is used in teas and tinctures to calm conflicted minds and soothe sweltering skin. The edible, aromatic flowers of late-blooming yellow Chrysanthemum are gathered in the early autumn and super critically extracted to release the plentiful plant compounds including waxes, oils, and flavonoids.

“…they invited me, those chrysanthemums, to put away all my sorrows…”
Marcel Proust, In the Shadow of Young Girls in Flower

 

“I belong in chrysanthemum hours, neatly lined up in flowerpots …” Fernando Pessoa