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The candle that began the Takamichi scent house. This fragrance was originally developed for Nine Orchard, the boutique hotel inside New York’s historic Jarmulowsky Bank building, where it lives throughout the guest rooms and spaces.
The composition opens with bright bergamot, lime, and neroli, softens into aquatic notes and orange blossom, and settles into cedarwood, musk, and amber. Clean, luminous, and quietly persistent—designed to shape atmosphere without overwhelming it.
Hand-poured with plant-based wax and a cotton wick for a clean, even burn. Housed in a minimalist glass vessel inspired by mid-century restraint.
Featured in Forbes and Domino for Takamichi’s distinctive approach to scent.
Explore the full Takamichi scent house.
WHY IT’S SPECIAL
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Origin of the Takamichi scent house: the original fragrance created for Nine Orchard.
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Atmospheric composition: evolves from bright citrus into aquatic florals and warm woods.
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Clean burn: plant-based wax and cotton wick ensure purity and consistency.
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Architectural presence: designed to shape a room subtly and continuously.
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Hand-poured in the USA: crafted with precision and restraint.
NOTES
Top: Bergamot, Lime, Neroli
Middle: Orange Blossom, Aquatic Notes, Petitgrain
Base: Cedarwood, Amber, Musk
DETAILS
Care: Burn 2–3 hours at a time to allow a full melt pool. Trim wick before each use. Discontinue use when ¼ inch of wax remains. Never leave unattended.
INGREDIENTS
Plant-based wax blend, fragrance, cotton wick.
THE BRAND
Takamichi is the in-house scent house founded by New York hairstylist Takamichi Saeki. Developed through decades of hands-on work with clients, each composition begins as an atmosphere—translated into candle, room spray, or body and hair care depending on its natural form.
The Nine Orchard candle is the origin of the scent house, created to live within the hotel and now extended into multiple forms. Other compositions remain singular, existing only as candlelight. Together, they form a growing olfactive library designed to bring clarity, calm, and quiet presence to both space and self.
Takamichi has been featured in The New York Times, Forbes, and Domino.