Aroma

Clary Sage

Clary sage, Salvia sclarea — herbaceous, warm, floral. Ancient eye remedy turned evening ritual. The tradition holds it for calm and a steadier breath.

Scent familyHerbal
Best seasonSpring, Summer, Autumn, Winter
Time of dayEvening

Clary sage, Salvia sclarea, is a biennial sage native to the Mediterranean and now widely cultivated in France, Bulgaria and Russia. The essential oil is steam-distilled from the flowering tops, and the plant has been used since antiquity — the Romans called it ocimum and used it in eyewashes, which is where the English name arrives: clary, from clear eye.

The scent opens herbaceous and slightly sharp — green, almost resinous — before revealing something sweeter underneath: hay, faint florals, a warm nutty quality that distinguishes it from its sharper culinary cousin. In the drydown it settles into something amber and quietly grounding. It is not a bright scent. It moves sideways rather than upwards, and it lingers without announcing itself.

The tradition files clary sage firmly under evening — the hour between ten and midnight when the day has released its grip but sleep hasn't quite arrived. It is the companion for the slow gear-change: bath time, the last cup of something warm, the conversation that happens after the phone is down. Its mood is balance — not the excitement of joy but the steadiness that makes joy possible.

One practice the tradition suggests: keep the oil on a bedside surface. Each evening, before the light goes out, open the bottle, hold it close and breathe. Name one thing that is finished. Let the ritual mark the end.

Below: the catalogue's clary sage — essential oil, candles, room sprays and bath blends. The whole quiet end of the evening shelf.

Resonates with

Moods

BalanceCalm

Intentions

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