Set a charcoal tablet on the grate, add resin, and the smoke gathers in a quiet, contained plume above the blue brass jar. This charcoal incense burner brings a ceremonial feel to resin incense, with golden patterning that catches the light while the ash falls neatly below.
Blue brass with a ritual presence
The deep blue body gives the piece a calm, altar-like mood without feeling heavy.
Fine golden markings run around the sides, adding detail that feels decorative rather than loud.
The low, rounded shape sits close to the surface, so the focus stays on the rising smoke.
Brass gives it a steady feel in the hand and a warm metallic tone at the rim.
The removable grate keeps the charcoal and resin raised, letting spent ash fall into the jar beneath.
Handmade brass from India
Made from brass and handmade in India, this burner has the character of a small ritual vessel rather than a plain ash catcher. The photo shows a blue finish with gold-toned decorative lines and symbols around the body, plus a fitted metal grate across the top.
Using it with charcoal and resin
This burner is made for charcoal tablets and resin incense. Place the charcoal on the removable grate, then add resin once the charcoal is ready. The incense itself produces the smoke; the burner holds the charcoal and catches the falling ash.
Use it on a heat-resistant base, away from flammable objects. Incense burners become very hot in use, so do not touch the jar or grate while charcoal is burning. Let everything cool fully before emptying the ash.
Third Eye chakra symbolism
In the yogic chakra tradition, the Third Eye chakra is associated with insight, inward attention and the space between ordinary thought and intuition. Blue and indigo tones are often used in chakra objects linked to this centre. Used with resin incense, the jar becomes a simple focal point for a quiet ritual, meditation space or moment of reflection, without needing to explain the practice too much.
Weight and …
region of manufacture: India