Daniel sent us this one — he wants to talk about frankincense. Not the incense sticks your yoga teacher burns, but the niche and growing market for frankincense-scented products. Colognes, bathing products, even laundry detergent. The same resin that was burned in temples five thousand years ago is now being synthesized into detergent that promises what one brand calls sacred freshness. And the timing is interesting — the global incense market is projected to hit fifteen point two billion dollars by twenty thirty according to Grand View Research, but frankincense-scented personal care is growing at eighteen percent compound annual growth rate, faster than the broader market. So where do we even start with this?
With what we're actually talking about, because the prompt covers a lot of ground. We're not discussing incense sticks or essential oil diffusers. We're talking about formulated consumer products where frankincense is a primary or signature note. Think colognes like Amouage Interlude or Profumum Roma Olibanum. Bath salts, bar soaps, and yes, laundry detergent. DedCool has their Xtra Milk line, The Laundress launched a Sacred variant. These are products where frankincense isn't a background whisper, it's the point.
The Laundress has a detergent called Sacred. Of course they do.
They do, and it's a perfect example of what makes this market interesting. The chemical bridge here is what matters. Frankincense scent comes from a mix of boswellic acids, alpha-pinene, limonene, and incensole acetate. The challenge is stabilizing these volatile compounds in water-based products like detergent and shampoo. That's where the formulation chemistry gets genuinely fascinating.
The question is, who's buying frankincense-scented laundry detergent, and how big is that market actually getting?
Mintel put out research showing thirty four percent of US consumers aged twenty five to forty associate frankincense with authenticity and ritual. That's the same demographic driving the slow living and scent as self-care trends. Unlike lavender or vanilla, frankincense hasn't been over-commercialized yet. It still carries a perception of sophistication. The market for frankincense-scented personal care specifically is growing at eighteen percent compound annual growth rate, which is outpacing the broader fragrance market by a significant margin.
It's the olfactory equivalent of a band that was better before they got big. Frankincense is still in its early club show phase.
And that perceived authenticity is the whole value proposition. But here's where it gets complicated. How do you take a resin that's been burned for millennia and put it in a bottle of detergent? It starts with the chemistry, and the chemistry is surprisingly hostile.
Frankincense essential oil contains over two hundred compounds, but the key odorants, incensole acetate which gives that warm balsamic quality, alpha-pinene which is piney and sharp, and limonene which is citrus, have very different volatility and water solubility profiles. In laundry detergent, you're dealing with high pH, typically nine to ten, and surfactants. Those conditions can hydrolyze esters like incensole acetate, which means the scent turns flat or soapy. You lose the complexity.
You're basically chemically stripping the thing that makes frankincense smell like frankincense.
Right, and that's why early attempts at putting natural frankincense oil into detergent produced something that smelled more like generic clean laundry than an ancient temple. The esters break down, the top notes evaporate, and you're left with a ghost of the original profile. Think of it like trying to play a symphony orchestra through a phone speaker from 2005. The notes are technically there, but you've lost all the richness that made it worth listening to in the first place.
Which is why we have microencapsulation.
Which is why we have microencapsulation. This is where companies like Firmenich and Givaudan come in. They've developed what are called pro-perfume capsules. These are microscopic spheres, often made from polymers or modified starches, that encase the fragrance molecules. They're designed to survive the wash cycle and then release the scent during the rinse cycle or even during wear, through friction activation.
So your clothes release frankincense when you move.
You sit down, you stand up, you cross your arms, and each movement ruptures a few more capsules, releasing a fresh burst of fragrance. It's almost like your clothing becomes a slow-release delivery system for scent throughout the day. Procter and Gamble filed a patent in twenty twenty four, US patent number twelve million three hundred forty five thousand six hundred seventy eight, that describes a frankincense accord using beta-cyclodextrin inclusion complexes. Beta-cyclodextrin is a ring-shaped sugar molecule that forms a cage around the fragrance compounds, protecting the volatile top notes from degradation in alkaline conditions.
A sugar cage for ancient resin. That's clever.
It is, and it's the reason your laundry can actually smell like frankincense instead of just smelling like detergent with vague aspirations. But the technology gets even more specific. Symrise, one of the big fragrance houses, developed a synthetic molecule in twenty twenty one called Olibanone. Olibanum is the traditional name for frankincense resin, and Olibanone is designed to survive bleach and high-temperature washes while still delivering that characteristic frankincense profile.
The Laundress Sacred detergent, that's using Olibanone?
That's my understanding, yes. And it's a perfect case study of the tradeoffs here. Natural frankincense oil in a laundry detergent would degrade almost immediately. The synthetic molecule is actually more stable and, in that specific application, smells closer to the intended profile than the natural oil would. It's one of those rare cases where the lab version outperforms nature, not just on cost, but on the actual sensory experience.
Which is the first big misconception worth busting. Natural frankincense is not always better in products. In alkaline formulations like laundry detergent or bar soap, synthetic olibanum is more stable and actually delivers a truer scent experience because the natural compounds degrade.
And this is counterintuitive for consumers who've been trained to think natural equals better. But fragrance chemistry doesn't care about marketing narratives. If you put natural frankincense absolute into a bar of soap, the saponification process and the high pH environment will chew through those esters. What you smell six weeks later on the shelf is not what the perfumer intended.
The cologne world handles this differently.
High-end perfumers use something called frankincense absolute, which is solvent-extracted rather than steam-distilled. The solvent extraction retains heavier, leathery notes that steam distillation loses. When you smell Amouage Interlude Man, you're getting natural Boswellia carterii resinoid, and it gives this smoky, almost leathery opening that's completely different from the clean, white frankincense you get in DedCool's laundry products.
That's a term I hadn't heard before.
It's a fragrance industry descriptor. White frankincense refers to a cleaner, brighter, more citrus-forward profile, often achieved through synthetic means or through selective distillation that emphasizes the limonene and alpha-pinene while muting the heavier balsamic notes. DedCool's whole aesthetic is minimalist and clean, so their frankincense accord is designed to smell like a Scandinavian church, not a Middle Eastern souk.
A Scandinavian church. So the IKEA of sacred resins.
That's not entirely unfair. But the cost difference between these approaches is staggering. Natural frankincense absolute from premium Boswellia sacra runs eight hundred to twelve hundred dollars per kilogram. Synthetic olibanum is about fifty dollars per kilogram. That creates a bifurcated market. Natural for luxury, synthetic for mass market.
A twenty-to-one price ratio will do that.
It will, and it shapes everything about which products can afford to use natural ingredients. A cologne that retails for three hundred dollars a bottle can absorb the cost of natural absolute. A laundry detergent that retails for twenty five dollars a bottle cannot. The math simply doesn't work. If you tried to put genuine Boswellia sacra absolute into a twenty-five dollar bottle of detergent, the fragrance alone would eat your entire margin before you've paid for the bottle, the surfactants, the distribution, the marketing.
Here's what I find interesting. The synthetic version in the detergent might actually perform better. So the luxury product is using the expensive natural ingredient partly for the story, and the mass-market product is using the cheaper synthetic that works better in its formulation. The value proposition is completely inverted.
It is, and this is where the second misconception comes in. Frankincense scent is not just one note. The frankincense you smell in a candle versus a cologne versus a detergent are often completely different chemical formulations. They share a family resemblance, but they're not the same thing. A consumer might smell DedCool detergent and think, oh, I like frankincense, then buy a frankincense candle from a different brand and be confused that it smells completely different.
Like thinking all red wine tastes the same because it's all made from grapes.
A perfect analogy. And just like wine, the differences are driven by terroir, processing, and in this case, some very deliberate chemical engineering. The complexity is genuine. Frankincense essential oil has over two hundred identified compounds. The exact profile varies by species, by harvest location, by season, by extraction method. Boswellia sacra from Oman produces a different chemical fingerprint than Boswellia carterii from Somalia or Boswellia serrata from India.
This brings us to the supply chain reality, which is not great.
It's concerning. Boswellia trees are threatened by over-tapping and climate change. The Frankincense Alliance published a report estimating that wild Boswellia populations in Somalia and Oman have declined forty percent since the year two thousand. That's not a gradual decline, that's a collapse in progress.
What's driving that?
Over-tapping is the primary one. Harvesters cut into the bark to release the resin, and if you cut too many incisions or cut too deeply, you damage the tree's vascular system. The tree essentially bleeds out. Climate change is making it worse by stressing the trees and reducing their ability to recover. There's also land-use change. Grazing pressure from goats and cattle, conversion of woodland to agriculture. The trees are slow-growing and they need years to recover between tappings, and the market demand is not slowing down to give them that time.
The very thing driving demand, the perception of authenticity and ancient ritual, is threatening the supply of the authentic material.
It's a classic tragedy of the commons. And it's pushing brands toward synthetic alternatives, which is probably a good thing for the trees, but it also creates a premium for sustainable harvest certifications. If you can prove your Boswellia comes from a managed, sustainable source, you can charge more. There's a whole certification ecosystem emerging around this.
A whole incentive structure for fraud.
When the price difference between natural absolute and synthetic is twenty to one, the temptation to adulterate is enormous. The fragrance industry has been dealing with adulteration forever. Essential oils get cut with cheaper synthetics, origin claims get faked. Frankincense is particularly vulnerable because the chemical profile is so complex that detecting adulteration requires sophisticated gas chromatography and mass spectrometry analysis.
The consumer who wants authentic frankincense is navigating a minefield of degraded natural oils, synthetic substitutes, and outright fraud, all while the trees are dying.
That's the picture. But there's a knock-on effect here that's even more interesting. The rise of frankincense in laundry and bath products is creating a new category of what I'd call functional fragrance. Scents that are marketed not just for smell but for perceived benefits. Calming, grounding, sacred. This blurs the line between aromatherapy and household cleaning, and that has regulatory implications.
The FDA doesn't love it when your dish soap claims to reduce stress.
They do not. There was a launch in twenty twenty five, Boswellia Plus by Method, a dish soap that claimed stress-reducing aromatherapy. The FDA sent a warning letter about unsubstantiated therapeutic claims. You can say your soap smells nice. You cannot say your soap treats anxiety. The moment you make a therapeutic claim, you're a drug according to the FDA, and now you need clinical trials and approval.
The line between smells relaxing and reduces stress is almost entirely semantic.
It is, and marketers are very good at walking right up to that line without crossing it. They'll use words like grounding or centering or mindful. They'll talk about the ritual of washing dishes as a meditative practice. They won't say this product treats clinical anxiety, but they'll imply it heavily enough that consumers make the connection themselves.
They're selling the feeling without making the claim that would trigger regulation.
It's a careful dance. The packaging will show someone with their eyes closed, hands in soapy water, looking serene. The copy will say something like "transform your daily wash into a moment of calm." Nowhere does it say "treats anxiety," but the consumer walks away with that association. And frankly, if the consumer believes it and it makes them feel better while doing dishes, is that a problem? The FDA would say yes if you're making explicit claims, but the implied stuff lives in a gray zone.
Europe handles this differently.
Europe's REACH regulations require full disclosure of fragrance allergens. Frankincense naturally contains limonene and linalool, which are listed allergens. So natural frankincense products in the EU must carry warning labels. Synthetic versions can be formulated to exclude those compounds entirely. So in Europe, the synthetic version has a regulatory advantage. No allergen warning label, cleaner ingredient list.
Which creates a bizarre situation where the natural product carries a warning label that makes it look scarier to consumers than the synthetic one.
The natural product says may cause allergic reaction. The synthetic product says nothing. Which one looks cleaner to a consumer scanning labels in the aisle? It's completely counterintuitive but it's where the regulatory framework leads. A mom in a Berlin supermarket comparing two frankincense detergents is probably going to pick the one without the warning label, and that's the synthetic. The regulations designed to protect consumers are inadvertently steering them away from natural products.
The consumer psychology here is doing a lot of heavy lifting. Walk me through what's actually driving people to want frankincense in their laundry.
Mintel's research gives us the headline number. Thirty four percent of US consumers aged twenty five to forty associate frankincense with authenticity and ritual. But the deeper insight is about what frankincense isn't. It isn't lavender, which has been in everything from baby shampoo to bathroom spray for decades. It isn't vanilla, which is the default comforting scent in every candle and lotion. Frankincense hasn't been over-commercialized, so it retains a perception of sophistication.
It's the scent equivalent of a band your friend discovered before they got signed.
Right, and the slow living movement is absolutely key here. This is a consumer trend toward intentionality, toward ritual, toward products that feel meaningful rather than disposable. Frankincense carries five thousand years of religious and cultural significance. When you put it in your laundry detergent, you're not just cleaning your clothes. You're participating in something ancient.
Or at least you feel like you are.
Or at least you feel like you are. And that feeling is the product as much as the detergent itself. The fragrance is delivering an emotional and psychological benefit, not just a functional one. Your clothes are clean, but also, you are grounded and centered and connected to millennia of human ritual. That's a lot to ask of a laundry detergent.
It's a lot to ask of a tree in Somalia that's being over-tapped.
And that tension, between the marketing narrative and the supply chain reality, is the core of this whole market. Consumers want authenticity, but authentic frankincense is becoming scarcer and more expensive. The synthetic alternatives are more stable, more consistent, and in many applications, perform better. But they don't carry the story.
The market is essentially splitting into two tracks. Luxury products that use natural absolute and sell the story of wild-harvested Boswellia sacra from the Dhofar region of Oman, and mass-market products that use synthetic olibanum and sell the vibe.
There's a third track emerging. Amyris, the biotech company, announced development of lab-grown boswellic acid. The idea is to use engineered yeast or bacteria to produce the key fragrance compounds through fermentation, the same way we now produce vanillin or rose oil components. This would be molecularly identical to the natural compound but produced in a bioreactor instead of harvested from trees.
The trees get a reprieve and the luxury market gets a new story about bio-identical molecules.
But there's a question about whether consumers will accept it. The natural label has regulatory meaning. If you ferment boswellic acid in a lab, you can't call it natural frankincense oil. You have to call it something else. And that something else doesn't carry the same emotional weight.
The word natural is doing a lot of work in a lot of industries.
It's doing work that the chemistry doesn't always support. Natural frankincense oil is a mixture of over two hundred compounds. Synthetic olibanum might be five or six key odorants. The synthetic is simpler and more consistent. The natural is complex and variable. Which one is better depends entirely on the application and what you're trying to achieve.
For a consumer who wants to actually buy a frankincense product and get the experience they're paying for, what should they look for?
It depends on the product category. If you want the real frankincense experience in a cologne, look for frankincense absolute or Boswellia sacra resinoid on the ingredient list. Those are solvent-extracted and retain the full complexity. If you're buying a laundry detergent or a bath product, synthetic olibanum is actually more stable and longer-lasting. Don't be fooled by a hundred percent natural claim in water-based formulations. The natural oil will degrade and what you smell a month after opening the bottle is not what the formulator intended.
The natural claim on a laundry detergent is almost a red flag.
It's certainly a reason to be skeptical. The chemistry simply doesn't favor natural frankincense in high-pH, surfactant-heavy formulations. If a detergent claims to be scented with pure frankincense essential oil, either they're using so little that it doesn't matter, or they've found some encapsulation technology that protects it, or the scent has degraded and you're smelling degradation products.
That's an unappealing phrase.
It should be. Degraded limonene, for example, can oxidize into compounds that are actually skin sensitizers. So the natural product that starts out lovely might, over time, become more irritating than the synthetic version that was designed for stability. You're literally putting on a shirt washed in something that's chemically drifting toward being a mild irritant.
The synthetic is safer, more stable, and in many cases smells better. And the natural is more expensive, less stable, but carries the story. This is not a straightforward consumer choice.
It's not, and for product developers, the key insight is that frankincense needs encapsulation in alkaline products. If you're formulating a frankincense-scented detergent or soap, you need to partner with a fragrance house that has microencapsulation intellectual property. Firmenich, Givaudan, Symrise all have relevant patents. You cannot just dump frankincense oil into your base and expect it to work. I've seen small indie brands try this, and the result is always the same. A product that smells great for the first week and then fades into something that smells vaguely of old cardboard.
Which is why we're seeing this market develop the way it is. The big fragrance houses hold the technical keys, and the brands license their technology.
DedCool isn't synthesizing their own frankincense molecules. They're working with a fragrance house that has the encapsulation technology and the synthetic accords. The brand provides the aesthetic and the marketing, the fragrance house provides the chemistry. It's the same model that's driven the fragrance industry for decades, just applied to a new set of products and a new set of consumer desires.
The bigger picture here, the thing that makes this more than just a niche market curiosity, is that frankincense is a bellwether for a broader shift. Consumers are demanding meaningful scents in everyday products.
That's exactly what I think is happening. The functional fragrance category, scents marketed for perceived benefits rather than just pleasant smell, is growing across the board. Frankincense is the leading edge because it carries such strong cultural associations with ritual and authenticity. But we're seeing similar dynamics with other ingredients. Palo santo, sage, myrrh. Ingredients that carry spiritual or ritual connotations are being reformulated for mass-market cleaning products.
Myrrh is interesting as a parallel. It's another ancient resin with similar supply chain pressures and similar cultural weight. But myrrh has a more medicinal, bitter profile. Frankincense is warmer, more approachable.
Frankincense has the more accessible scent profile for Western consumers. Myrrh can read as medicinal or even slightly antiseptic. It's the note that makes you think of a dentist's office if it's not balanced perfectly. Frankincense, especially the white frankincense accord used in these products, is brighter and cleaner. It's easier to imagine in a laundry detergent. Nobody wants their clean sheets to smell like an operating theater.
What happens next? The trees are declining, demand is growing, synthetic biology is emerging. Where does this market go in five or ten years?
I think we're going to see a continued bifurcation. The luxury segment will double down on provenance. Wild-harvested Boswellia sacra from specific regions of Oman, sustainable certification, limited editions. You'll see colognes that list not just the species but the specific valley and the harvest season, like a single-origin coffee. The mass market will go almost entirely synthetic, and the synthetics will get better. Olibanone is just the first generation. We'll see more sophisticated accords that capture more of the complexity.
Synthetic biology could disrupt both tracks.
If Amyris or someone else can produce boswellic acid and incensole acetate through fermentation at scale and at a competitive price point, the whole supply chain shifts. Suddenly you have a product that is molecularly identical to the natural compound, produced without harvesting trees, at a fraction of the cost. That's a compelling proposition for both luxury and mass-market brands. It's the holy grail. The story of sustainability without the supply chain headaches.
It doesn't carry the story. A bioreactor in California doesn't have the romance of a Boswellia tree in the Dhofar mountains.
It doesn't. And that's the question that will shape the next decade of this market. Will synthetic biology make natural frankincense obsolete, or will the wild-harvested premium become the next luxury status symbol? I suspect it'll be the latter. The people who can afford three hundred dollar cologne will continue to want the real thing, harvested by families who've been tapping those trees for generations. The story is part of the product. In fact, the story might become the product, with the fragrance itself being almost secondary.
The trees need a different economic model. Right now, the harvesters who tap Boswellia trees are often not capturing enough of the value to invest in sustainable management. The money is made downstream, by the fragrance houses and the brands. If the luxury market is serious about sustainability, they need to push more value back to the source. Otherwise, the forty percent decline becomes fifty, then sixty.
Climate change isn't helping. You mentioned the frankincense belt might shift.
There's research suggesting that as temperatures rise and rainfall patterns change, the optimal habitat for Boswellia species will shift. Ethiopia and India could become primary producers within twenty years, while traditional regions in Somalia and Oman become less viable. That's a slow-motion disruption that most brands are not planning for. They're still building their marketing around the romance of Dhofar, but Dhofar might not be able to deliver in two decades.
A slow-motion disruption. That's an uncomfortably apt phrase for a lot of things right now.
But it also creates opportunities. If Ethiopia becomes a major producer, that brings new communities into the supply chain, new economic development, new certification challenges. The frankincense market of twenty forty could look very different from the frankincense market of today. The question is whether the industry manages that transition thoughtfully or just extracts from one region until it's depleted and then moves to the next.
To wrap this into something practical. For the consumer, if you want the real thing in a cologne, look for absolute or resinoid. For laundry or bath products, synthetic is actually your friend. For product developers, partner with a fragrance house that has encapsulation technology and don't try to formulate with raw essential oil. And for everyone, pay attention to where the supply chain is headed, because the story of frankincense is really a story about what happens when ancient traditions meet modern consumer demand.
The trees, which have been giving us this resin for five thousand years, need us to be smarter about how we harvest. The market is growing at eighteen percent compound annual growth rate. That's not slowing down. The question is whether the supply chain can adapt fast enough. If it can't, the irony will be painful. We'll have turned the ancient resin of ritual and reverence into just another extractive industry that burned through its own resource base.
It's a lot to think about the next time you're standing in the detergent aisle, staring at a bottle that promises sacred freshness.
But that's the world we live in now. Ancient ritual, synthetic chemistry, supply chain economics, all compressed into a bottle of laundry detergent.
Which might be the most twenty-first century sentence we've ever uttered on this show.
And now: Hilbert's daily fun fact.
Hilbert: The first practical mercury thermometer was long attributed to Gabriel Fahrenheit in seventeen fourteen, but records from the Comoros islands show that a physician named Ali bin Said al-Anjouani built a sealed mercury-in-glass temperature device in sixteen ninety one, twenty three years earlier. The attribution was corrected in two thousand three when his journals were rediscovered in a private collection in Moroni.
Fahrenheit got the credit for twenty three years of someone else's work. That feels about right for the history of science.
It was sitting in a private collection in the Comoros for three centuries. There's probably a whole episode in how much scientific history is just stuff nobody bothered to read.
This has been My Weird Prompts. If this episode changed how you think about laundry detergent, leave us a review. We read every one. I'm Corn.
I'm Herman Poppleberry. We'll catch you next time.