A small white sage smudge stick with seven bright corn leaves, made for smoke cleansing rituals, altar work, and marking a quiet pause at home. The bundle has a dry, herbal presence before it is lit, with grey-green sage beneath folded corn leaves in pink, purple, green, yellow, orange and red. It feels more like a ritual object than a simple bundle of herbs, colourful, textured and ready to become part of a considered practice.
What you’ll notice in the bundle
The sage sits in soft, silvery-grey layers, with curled dried leaves giving the bundle a natural, crumpled texture.
Seven folded corn leaves add a band of colour across the top, turning the smudge stick into a small altar piece between uses.
Pale binding keeps the botanicals close together, so the shape feels compact and easy to handle.
Unlit, the scent is dry and herbaceous, the kind of aroma that suits a quiet room, a threshold, or a simple moment of intention.
As it smoulders, use the smoke as a visual focus rather than a rushed task, letting the ritual stay slow and deliberate.
The scent of white sage
White sage has a distinctive aromatic character: dry, green, resinous and clean-edged. It is stronger than many kitchen herbs, with a ceremonial feel that becomes more present when the tip is lit and allowed to smoulder.
The corn leaves bring colour and texture to the bundle. In North American Indigenous contexts, corn carries deep cultural significance, often connected with nourishment, direction, season and reciprocity. Here, the seven leaves give the smudge stick its layered, symbolic form without turning the practice into a performance.
How to use it with care
Light the tip briefly, then blow out the flame so the bundle smoulders. Hold it over a heatproof bowl or shell, and keep it away from curtains, papers and loose fabrics.
Use only as much smoke as you need for the moment. Smudge bundles are typically reused across several sessions rather than burnt through in one sitting. To st…
region of manufacture: Mexico