The post Introduction to Natural Perfumery appeared first on New Forest Aromatics.
]]>My natural perfumery workshop is a day to immerse yourself in the beauty of natural scents and it will take you on a sensory journey like no other. Deepen your understanding and confidence of using natural essential oils and absolutes to create your own unique fragrance.
During this workshop you will create your own personal eau de toilette using only the finest natural essential oils and plant extracts, in an organic alcohol base and New
Forest spring water. But, this workshop is more than just a lesson in perfume-making; it’s a voyage into the rich the history and folklore of aromatic plants. From ancient medicinal practices to sacred rituals and magical traditions, these plants have woven themselves into the essence of human culture for many centuries. As you sample many different beautiful scents, you’ll deepen your understanding and the personal connection you have to each one.
Our connection to scent is so subjective, it is a combination of what the physical chemical characteristics of the individual essential oil are and how that affects our inner biology and our minds. But we will also have an individual emotional connection to that scent and the feelings it evokes.
Scent is also linked to memory and emotions, so our response to a particular scent may include past experiences during our lifetime, places we have visited, foods we
have eaten. This personal connection may also include our individual cultural reference, the type of society we have been brought up in, our families, faith or religion.
Popular aromatic oils may also convey contrasting reactions in different age groups. Lavender is a great example where sometimes people of my generation and culture associate it with older ladies, maybe your Granny had lavender bath salts or drawer liners? This may make you feel instantly comforted and happy when you smell this, or if you didn’t like your grandmother much, it could have the reverse reaction! My daughter’s age group (who is in her twenties) on the other hand, do not really seem have this scent memory or association to older people and often react quite differently when they smell this scent. These personal experiences can all have a positive, nostalgic or negative effect when we smell that scent again. This will help to inform us which scents we are drawn to when creating our final, personal fragrance.
As you learn more about the properties and qualities of each essential oil, throughout the day, your confidence and understanding will grow about how to harness these qualities within yourself to create your unique aromatic message.
Throughout the day I’ll talk about intention, what do you want your perfume to say, how do you want it to make you feel? Your perfume is more than just a fragrance; it’sa reflection of your innermost self, a way to share your essence with the world around you. We’ll also explore different fragrance families and accords, guiding you to build, top, middle and base notes to create your own fragrant accords and final perfume. You also have opportunity to name your scent giving it it’s final stamp of personality and intention. You will leave with your own 50ml bottle of eau de toilette.
The day is fun, inclusive and a great way to learn more about nature’s vast palette of beautiful aromas. Book onto one of our upcoming natural perfumery workshops.
Read some of the latest reviews from customers below…
I loved every minute of this day. It was hands on. I was interested in learning the history of perfume up to the present day. I found it thought-provoking thinking about what intention I wanted to put into my perfume.
It was great fun playing around with all the different smells and trying to pinpoint what they were.
Debbie is extremely knowledgeable, warm patient and great fun!
My son and I both came away with our own unique perfume.
I recommend going on one of these workshops, or buying one as a gift for someone.
Thank you very much, Debbie.
Sophia
I went along expecting to learn about scent and learn how to make a perfume. However this workshop is so much more it’s also about your personal journey and throughout the day you are totally absorbed into the world of scent and also how certain fragrances bring wonderful memories and emotions into life. A skilled and passionate teacher Debbie brings fragrance to life. A MUST DO for anyone interested in this fascinating subject.
Jacqui
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]]>The post Creating a Bespoke Perfume appeared first on New Forest Aromatics.
]]>Most commercial perfumes available on the market contain a combination of synthetic and natural ingredients. They are designed to create a scent that we are drawn to, or to evoke a feeling, or to provoke a reaction and make a statement about who we are, or who we aspire to be like.
In my consultancy, I only use essential oils and natural ingredients to create my perfumes. Essential oils work on many different levels, their properties affect us, mind, body and spirit. Their unique qualities can also evoke a feeling or memory and they have the added advantage that they can also enhance mood, emotions and our general well-being. By choosing your own unique blend for your perfume, you can personalise your scent to include qualities and feelings that you would like to enhance in yourself and create this feeling in the space around you.
A bespoke natural perfume can be created for lots of different occasions or purposes, a perfume for a wedding, an anniversary, or for a special birthday.
I have designed perfumes for writers, to help them get into the creative flow, or for people to use when public speaking, or in front of audiences to help boost confidence. I have also created seasonal scents, and everyday or evening perfumes. The choice is yours and the big question I ask during the consultation is what do you want your perfume to say about you?
After filling out your consultation form, I will help you to start to slowly build a fragrant picture. You smell each individual scent without knowing what it is first, so to avoid any preconceived ideas you have about scents you like or don’t like.
During the session, we create three separate accords (combinations), containing top notes, middle notes and base notes, before combining these together. Your perfume evolves throughout the session, and you get to tweak and refine the scent at each stage to create a final scent. Once you are happy with your fragrance it is then added to our natural alcohol and water base to complete your unique 50ml bottle of eau de toilette, to take home with you.
This session takes two hours and is a wonderfully affirming and holistic process. You can name your finished perfume and I keep a record of the final formulation if you would like to order again in the future.
This session makes a wonderful gift or treat for a loved one, or to treat yourself.
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]]>The post Prioritise Your Well-Being appeared first on New Forest Aromatics.
]]>In these difficult times, the two issues that people have asked me to create products for again and again are something to help to get a better night’s sleep and for women dealing with stress and anxiety and the emotional and physical symptoms that these can create. These issues are often exacerbated during pre-menstrual days of the month and during peri-menopause and menopause.
Prioritising well-being and taking time out for yourself is so important, to help deal with what the world and life throw at us.
We developed our new Well-Being range to specifically help anyone get a better night’s sleep and for women to feel more balanced and get back to their own innate rhythm and sense of self.
As part of your sleep ritual, use this deeply soothing range to unwind for bed, or to help you to get back to sleep if you wake in the night. Eases aching muscles, helps your mind to slow and feel more meditative and able to switch off. We blended these essential oils together for their specific therapeutic properties:
The rollerscent is in a light oil base of locally sourced rapeseed oil, plus fractionated (unscented) coconut oil, which is easily absorbed into the skin.
How to use:
Use on pulse points, under the nose or temples (avoid eyes), when ready for bed. Take a deep breath, and inhale the beautiful aroma. Keep by your bedside if you wake in the night, and re-apply to ease you back into sleep.
A natural pillow spray made with New Forest Spring water and our …And Sleep blend.
How to use:
Spray in your bedroom, or lightly over your pillow (avoid direct contact with delicate fabrics), to help you drift away…
Our deeply nourishing body butter is very special!
…And Sleep blend, includes mango, shea and cocoa butter whipped together with deeply nourishing and regenerating, rosehip, camellia, calendula, apricot oils and locally sourced rapeseed oil. Amazing for dry, maturing, stretched or sagging skin.
How to use:
Use before bed, all over your body, focusing on feet and legs, (especially if you suffer from restless legs) and luxuriate in the scent as you drop off to sleep.
Magnesium and Himalayan rock salts have been blended with …And Sleep scent, to give you a deeply calming bath experience. These salts help to ease tensions, aches and pains, while the scent helps you to truly unwind.
How to use:
At the end of the day, add to a bath to help you unwind, ready for a good night’s sleep.
Made with non-GM Soya wax and our special blend of oils.
How to use:
Why not light your candle when in the bath, or in the evening to help you to relax.
Get back into your own innate rhythm & harmony. Life often throws a lot at us women. We can wear many ‘hats’ during our day; wife, partner, mother, daughter, friend, lover, boss, employee, etc. We can be pulled in many different directions and it’s easy to lose a sense of our true selves.
Use this range of products when you feel out of step with yourself, anxious, overwhelmed, or exhausted. Helps you to reduce anxiety, stress, fear, and promotes feelings of calm and harmony, for the mind, emotions and body.
Particularly useful pre-menstrually, or during perimenopause, menopause & beyond.
We blended these essential oils together for their specific therapeutic properties:
In a light oil base of locally sourced rapeseed oil, plus fractionated (unscented) coconut oil, which is easily absorbed into the skin.
How to use:
Use on pulse points, under the nose or temples (avoid eyes), when ready for bed. Take a deep breath, and inhale the beautiful aroma, to instantly help you feel more balanced and able to carry on.
Our deeply nourishing body butter is very special!
Our Women’s Harmony blend, plus mango, shea and cocoa butters whipped together with deeply nourishing and regenerating rosehip, camellia, calendula, apricot oils and locally sourced rapeseed oil. Amazing for dry, maturing, stretched or sagging skin.
How to use:
Use on all over your body and luxuriate in the scent and feel of this special product.
Magnesium and Himalayan rock salts have been blended with our Women’s harmony scent, to give you a soothing bath experience. The salts help to ease tensions, aches and pains, while the scent carries you away and then brings you back to your sense of true self.
How to use:
After a stressful day, add to a bath, perfect for some ‘me’ time.
Made with non-GM Soya wax and our special blend of oils.
How to use:
Why not light your candle when in the bath, or when you need to get back to a sense of self.
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]]>The post Rosemary Essential Oil – Oil of the month appeared first on New Forest Aromatics.
]]>Rosemary – Latin name Rosmarinus officinalis is a shrubby evergreen herb, that can grow up to 2 metres high, with silvery-green needle-shaped leaves and small, pale blue flowers. The whole plant is wonderfully aromatic. Native to the Mediterranean it is now cultivated worldwide in China, USA, England and across the Mediterranean, including Italy, Spain, Morocco and France.
It has a distinctly strong, fresh herby/minty scent with a woody undertone; rosemary is one of the earliest plants to be used for food, medicine, magic and ritual. It is considered a sacred herb in different cultures and has traditionally been used to drive away evil spirits and protect against the plague and unwanted visitors to your home. Still today you will often see pots of rosemary either side of the entrance to a home, as a symbol of protection.
Rosemary is also known as the oil of Remembrance, helping us to remember who we really are and to remember and honour others. It is traditionally placed onto coffins to symbolise remembering the dead; a sprig is still worn on Anzacs day to remember those who died at Gallipoli in Turkey, during the First World War. Rosemary grew on the hillsides where so many where killed in that terrible battle.
The essential oil is extracted from fresh flowering tops by steam distillation and its predominant chemical constituents are pinene, camphene, limonene, cineol and linalool.
Rosemary is a very versatile essential oil, it is uplifting and stimulating to mind and body, great to use as a study aid or for preparation or revising for exams, presentation, etc. It is also strengthening and protection for our body and energies, helping to protect us from both disease and negative energies.
Rosemary essential oil is analgesic, antiseptic, fungicidal, anti-oxidant, diuretic, rubefacient, stimulant and hepatic. It is great for chest infections, flatulence, poor circulation and lung conditions.
Rosemary has been used for centuries for many different skin and hair complaints. It promotes healthy hair, reduces dandruff and greasy hair, regulates sebum so also good for acne and oily skins, it also has insect repelling qualities.
In perfumery, it is a striking, clean, green, top/middle note, with a soft balsam undertone. It is very popular in both male and female Chypre and outdoorsy fragrances.
Hand and Body Products:
Forest Essence Room Products – candles, room fragrances and reed diffusers.
This wonderfully green ‘walk in the forest’ scent includes: Rosemary, fir, Cypress and Cedarwood
Warm Hug Products –
The blend created for these products is designed to help you feel uplifted, refreshed and joyful.
The scent includes: Ginger, Rosemary, Juniper, Lemon Myrtle and Cardamom.
Please note: As with all essential oils – always dilute first before applying to the skin and consult a qualified aromatherapist if you are uncertain of how to use or dosage. If you have a specific allergy or contra-indications avoid use.
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]]>The post Jasmine Essential Oil – the perfect scent for your Valentine appeared first on New Forest Aromatics.
]]>Jasmine is one of my favourite oils, whenever I smell its rich, floral, sultry scent, it takes me back to my garden when I lived in Hong Kong and warm tropical evenings.
‘The Queen of the Night’, Jasmine symbolises sensuality, sensitivity and communion with our higher self/spirituality. In folklore books, I’ve seen it represented as both a female and male deity, showing the intertwining of both male and female energies. Across South East Asia, Jasmine flowers are given as garlands and offerings at both Hindu and Buddhist shrines.
Jasmine – Latin name Jasminum officinale –is native to China and Northern India and is cultivated in the Mediterranean, especially Italy, Morocco, Algeria and Turkey.
Jasmine flowers offer their scent more strongly after dark, to attract moths, their nighttime pollinators. The flowers are also harvested at night time, to optimise the yield of the essential oil. The essential oil is extracted from fresh petals by steam distillation or solvent extraction to create an absolute. Its predominant chemical contents are benzyl acetate, linalool, benzyl alcohol, indole, benzyl benzoate, cis-jasmone, Geraniol.
Indole is particularly interesting, often called a faecal note, this aromatic chemical is found in both excrement and certain flowers, particularly Jasmine. In high concentrations, this earthy, putrid, stinky scent, dilutes down to something pleasant and intoxicating. However, the sense of smell is a wonderful thing and whenever I teach a perfumery class, I always get a small percentage of students who cannot bear the scent of Jasmine and I’ve heard ‘smells like poo’, ‘rotting flesh’, etc. While most people love it and wax lyrical on its beauty and sensuous scent.
It is one of the most difficult and expensive oils to extract with a very low yield from its petals, plus it has to be harvested after dark!
Jasmine essential oil is uplifting, antidepressant, aphrodisiac, anti-spasmodic, and a tonic for the uterus.
Jasmine is used to uplift the mind and bring a sense of optimism. It is also a known aphrodisiac, helping us explore our sensuality and sex drive. Traditionally used during labour as a uterine tonic and to slow and deepen the breath.
On the skin it is an effective moisturiser, hydrating the skin while having a general stimulant and antiseptic action. It is good for all skin types, but especially so for dry, mature and irritated skin.
In perfumery, it is a middle note and a has a rich, warm, floral aroma with an earthy undertone. It is very popular in commercial perfumes for both men and women, including Chanel no.5, Opium, Acqua Di Palma Colonia Pura.
New Forest Aromatics Products that contain Jasmine:
Please note: As with all essential oils – always dilute first before applying to the skin and consult a qualified aromatherapist if you are uncertain of how to use or dosage. If you have a specific allergy or contra-indications avoid use.
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]]>The post Bergamot Essential Oil – Oil of the Month appeared first on New Forest Aromatics.
]]>So, what better essential oil to get into your life this month than sunny, citrusy bergamot!
Bergamot -Latin name Citrus bergamia is a greeny/yellow fruit, (a cross between a lemon and an orange), which grows on small trees. Native to the tropical areas of Asia and now cultivated extensively in southern Italy, with almost 80% of the total world production:
This beautiful citrus fruit has been used in Italy for 100’s of years in folk medicine and for skin conditions. It became a popular perfume ingredient in the 1800s and is the flavour of Earl Grey tea, a perfect ‘pick me up’ tea, which I often drink in the afternoon.
The essential oil is extracted from the peel of the fruit by a cold expression, its predominant chemical contents are linalyl acetate and alcohols including linalool and terpenes and furocoumarins.
Bergamot is known for its uplifting, joyful qualities, bringing a ray of light to the darkest times. It seems to amplify light and energy and helps us to feel the joy inside us, lifting us to keep going and to look to the light.
Bergamot essential oil is analgesic, antiseptic, diuretic, digestive and a tonic.
Bergamot has been used in Italy for centuries for its insect repelling qualities, also for boils, bites, oily skins and cold sores. It eases digestion and flatulence. But it really comes into its own for the mind and spirit, for all stress related conditions and anxiety.
In perfumery, it is a fabulous, complex top note, a warm, soft, citrus aroma with floral and woody undertones. It is very popular in both male and female perfumes and is wonderful ‘bridging’ oil for connecting citrus scents to floral, herby, spicy or woody notes.
This wonderfully happy scent includes: Bergamot, May Chang, Ginger, Lemon and Patchouli.
The blend created for these products is designed to help you feel uplifted, refreshed and joyful.
The scent includes: Bergamot, Lime, lemongrass, Mint, Basil, etc
The blend created for these products is designed to help you let go of the day’s stresses, relax, or meditate and feel pampered.
The scent includes: Bergamot, Frankincense, Jasmine, Sandalwood, Clary Sage, Geranium
Please note: As with all essential oils – always dilute first before applying to the skin and consult a qualified aromatherapist if you are uncertain of how to use or dosage. If you have a specific allergy or contra-indications avoid use.
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]]>Christmas is nearly upon us and the essential oils that always spring to mind are Frankincense and Myrrh, two of the precious gifts given to Jesus at his birth.
People often joke that they’d keep the gold, but many have no idea really what Frankincense and Myrrh are and why were they deemed so special! I’ll leave the wonderful Myrrh for another day, but let me explain what a gift Frankincense is to the world…
Frankincense, also called Olibanum, comes from the Boswellia genus of trees of which there are five different species. The most common one used today in Aromatherapy is the Boswellia carterii. Native to the Middle East region, the biggest quantity is now grown and harvested in Somalia.
This small, gnarly tree, thrives in dry, hot, harsh climates and the essential is extracted by tapping the bark, where a sticky resin exudes and forms ‘tears’ that harden in cooler climates. These ‘tears’ are what have traditionally been burned in incense holders, especially during mass in the Catholic church. The Catholic Church is still today the biggest single buyer of the Frankincense resin.
The essential oil is extracted from the resin or ‘tears’ by steam distillation and its predominant chemical contents are monoterpenes, sesquiterpenes and alcohols; pinene, limonene, octanol, terpinene.
Frankincense has been used for thousands of years, throughout the Middle East, India and China. It was traded and highly prized for it’s spiritual, medicinal and cosmetic properties.
The resin protects the tree from infection and repairs damage and disease. It has been used for humans in the same way; the incense in the churches had a fumigating effect as well as it’s elevating and spiritual effects to help the individual connect with their God. By weight it was as expensive as gold and was given to Jesus in recognition of his Divinity.
Frankincense essential oil is very anti-inflammatory, antiseptic, diuretic, sedative and expectorant.
Frankincense is wonderful for the skin, soothing, nourishing, particularly for mature skins. It has a relaxing quality, which helps you to slow down and breathe, particularly useful for meditation, or to relieve stress and anxiety. Also, an expectorant for coughs and colds and an anti-inflammatory effect for many different inflammatory conditions.
In perfumery, it is a gentle base note, with lemony, warm, woody, balsamic tones. It is very popular in both male and female perfumes.
The blend created for these products is designed to help you let go of the day’s stresses, relax, or meditate and feel pampered.
The scent includes: Frankincense, Jasmine, Sandalwood, clary Sage, Geranium and Mandarin
Please note: As with all essential oils – always dilute first before applying to the skin and consult a qualified aromatherapist if you are uncertain of how to use or dosage. If you have a specific allergy or contra-indications avoid use.
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]]>The post Cedarwood Essential Oil – Oil of the Month appeared first on New Forest Aromatics.
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There are several species of cedar around the world, I’ve seen the magnificent Himalayan Cedar (Cedrus deodorata) growing in the mountains of Nepal and Virginian Cedar growing in the USA.
The cedar most commonly seen in the UK is the Lebanese Cedar (Cedrus libani) with it’s tall, spreading branching and high canopy. In our products we use a very close relative to Lebanese Cedar- Atlas cedar (Cedrus atlantica), which has a more conical shape, but is equally as beautiful.
Cedarwood – Latin name Cedrus atlantica – it is native to the Atlas Mountains of Morocco and Algeria, today it is cultivated in North Africa and the USA.
The essential oil is extracted from the wood and sawdust by steam distillation and is one of the earliest oils to be extracted by the ancient Egyptians. It’s predominant chemical contents are sesquiterpenes and alcohols; Atlantone, caryophyllene, cedrol and himachalane.
Cedar oil was used in ancient Egypt as part of the embalming process and the inner sarcophagi was made of cedar wood which is slow to decay. For centuries it has been used in perfumery, cosmetics and herbal remedies and even as a renowned poison antidote! The wood was used for building ships and homes, for it’s strength, durability plus it’s odour that repels moths, ants and other insects.
Cedarwood essential oil is antiseptic, fungicidal, expectorant, astringent, antiseborrheic, and a sedative to the nerves.
Cedarwood is very grounding, strengthening and is great to use when you need stamina, endurance and stability. It has an affinity with the respiratory system and can be rubbed on the chest to ease catarrh and chesty coughs.
It is great in blends for moth repelling (a key oil in the Total Wardrobe Care products – natural moth repelling products that we also make)
For the skin, cedarwood oil is a hair tonic promoting healthy hair growth when blended into a carrier oil or shampoo. It’s natural antiseptic and astringent properties are great for oily, acne skins to balance an over-production of sebum. I’ve used this for years, as part of a blend in a special face cream I make for my brother who suffered with acne rosacea. It has helped his skin a lot and he wouldn’t be without it.
In perfumery it is a base note, a great fixative with soft, woody notes and a hint of citrus. It is very popular in both male and female perfumes.
Please note: As with all essential oils – always dilute first before applying to the skin and consult a qualified aromatherapist if you are uncertain of how to use or dosage. If you have a specific allergy or contra-indications avoid use.
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]]>The post Essential Oil of the Month: Rose appeared first on New Forest Aromatics.
]]>The Queen of flowers, Rose symbolises love and femininity across many parts of the world. Traditionally associated with Venus, Aphrodite and the Holy Rose – Mother Mary, it’s the flower we give to others to celebrate love, whether it’s red roses for Valentine’s day or weddings, yellow roses for friendship or white roses for new births or spirituality. When I lived overseas for 12 years, whenever I came home to the UK to visit, my lovely Dad would always cut a rose from his garden and put it into my case to take back with me, made me cry and smile every time!
It is believed to be native to the Orient but has been widely cultivated in Turkey, Bulgaria, Morocco and the Middle East. The essential oil is extracted from fresh petals by steam distillation or solvent extraction to create an absolute. Its predominant chemical contents are alcohols; citronellol, geraniol and nerol, but its full chemistry is very complex, making it hard to reproduce effectively by synthetic means. This is why synthetic rose really isn’t a patch on the true scent of the essential oil. It is one of the most difficult and expensive oils to extract with a very low yield from the petals, it takes around 250,000 rose petals to make a teaspoon of the essential oil, so it is expensive to buy, but it is potent, bursting with scent and carries you off to somewhere beautiful! Rose symbolises unconditional love and has a very high frequency that helps to elevate brain rhythm frequencies, enhancing well-being and positivity.
Rose essential oil is an antidepressant, antiseptic, antiviral, aphrodisiac, astringent, bactericidal, choleretic, haemostatic sedative, and a tonic for the heart, liver, stomach and uterus.
Rose soothes the mind and helps with depression, anger, grief, loss, nervous tension and stress. It also is a known aphrodisiac, helping us explore our sexuality, self-esteem and self-nurturing.
It is most aids poor circulation and heart palpitations/arrhythmia as well as high blood pressure and is also used to boost the liver and gallbladder.
Rose Otto oil has a particular affinity with the female reproductive organs, with a clearing, regulating and purifying effect and can be used for regulating and balancing hormones, irregular menstruation, functional infertility, leucorrhoea, menorrhagia, uterine bleeding and other uterine disorders, while having a general toning effect on the uterus.
On the skin it is an effective moisturiser, hydrating the skin while having a general stimulant and antiseptic action. It is good for all skin types, but especially so for dry, mature and irritated skin.
In perfumery, it is a middle note and a has a floral, spicy, aroma with a citrus, woody undertones. It is very popular in commercial perfumes including Chanel no. 5.
English Rose Bath Salts
English Flowers Room Fragrance
English Flowers Reed Diffuser
English Flowers Candle
It is also a keynote in the Urban Goddess Roller Scent I’ve recently created and now available on our website.
Please note: As with all essential oils – always dilute first before applying to the skin and consult a qualified aromatherapist if you are uncertain of how to use or dosage. If you have a specific allergy or contra-indications avoid use.
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]]>The post A hint of Thailand in the New Forest appeared first on New Forest Aromatics.
]]>Yet here in the heart of the New forest Senspa’s award-winning Thai spa can offer an escape from everyday life without the travel, and a chance to experience a hint of Thailand.
Those who have been fortunate enough to relax in the eastern inspired Senspa will know this fantastic spa has an instantly recognisable signature scent. A special blend of Lime, May Chang, Bergamont, Ylang Ylang and Palmarosa essential oils this scent instantly calms and soothes.
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