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Aromatherapy Recipes
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Cardamom Essential Oil
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| Botanical Name: | Elettaria cardamomum |
| Geographic Origin: | Sri Lanka |
| Method of Farming: | Cultivated: Pure, Natural & Authentic |
| Method of Extraction: | Steam Distillation |
| Part of Plant: | Seeds |
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| size |
price |
payment method |
| 100ml (3.38 fl oz) |
| 10ml (1/3 fl oz) |
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Description of Cardamom Essential Oil
Cardamom essential oil has a warm, spice-like scent with a slightly penetrating camphoraceous odor. It is an almost colorless or pale yellow liquid which darkens when exposed to sunlight. The oil is steam distilled from a perennnial herb. Why Auroma 100% pure and natural Cardamom essential oil from The Aromatherapy Place: Some dishonest Companies combine botanical species to create a cheaper version of an essential oil. As an example, the most common Lavender type comes from Lavadula angustifolia. There is also a cheaper version which comes from Lavandula X in Termedia. The two oils are combined, unbeknownst to you, resulting in a cheaper version of Lavender. Auroma guarantees the botanical species origin for each essential oil through testing and analysis, and states it on their product label – so quality and origin are always assured.
Suggested items for use with Cardamom Essential Oil
Cardamom Essential Oil Blends Well With
Bergamot Essential Oil , Pepper Black Essential Oil , Cajeput Essential Oil , Eucalyptus Essential Oil Australiana , FennelEssentialOil , Geranium Essential Oil , Ginger Essential Oil , Juniper Berry Essential Oil , Lemon Essential Oil , Myrtle Essential Oil Dalmation , Olibanum Essential Oil (Frankincense) , Peppermint Essential Oil Arvensis , Pine Essential Oil Austrian Pine Needle , Rosewood Essential Oil Brazilian , Tea Tree Essential Oil Premium , Thyme Essential Oil Linalool Organic
Safety information for Cardamom Essential Oil
Please visit our General Essential Oil Safety Information page for important safety guidelines on using essential oils. Specific Safety Information: Cardamom essential oil is non-toxic, non-irritant and non-sensitising. See The Complete Guide to Aromatherapy by Salvatorre Battaglia, Second edition published by The International Centre of Holistic Aromatherapy in 2003 page 175
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