Quiet apothecary workspace with beeswax, sage bundles, palo santo, and amber bottles on a weathered oak bench

We make small things for a slower kind of evening.

Agnosaura started as a kitchen project. One pot of beeswax, a jar of cotton wicks, a draft from the window. The first candles were a little crooked. We kept the second batch.

What we do now is mostly the same, just less crooked. Hand-poured candles. Cleaned bundles of white sage. Palo santo from a single farm in Peru. Ritual kits we put together for people who want a real moment at the end of a long day.

Honey-colored beeswax being poured into a matte black stoneware mold

Made by hand. Sometimes the marks show. We think that's fine.

Every candle in our shop is poured by one of three people, in a small studio above a stationery store. That sentence is true today and will probably still be true in a year. We are not in a rush to grow. We would rather you pick up one good candle than three forgettable ones.

The wax is European beeswax, mostly from beekeepers in southern Germany. Wicks are cotton. The labels we tie on with raw linen string are written by hand, which is also why they come out a little uneven. None of that is on purpose. It is just how a small studio works.

Apothecary shelf with rows of small amber bottles, dried herb bundles hanging from linen string, and palo santo in a black stoneware bowl

For the herbs and resins, we work with a handful of growers we have known since 2024. White sage from a farm in Mendocino that has been replanting since the 90s. Palo santo from Peru, harvested only from naturally fallen trees, never cut down. The amber bottles you see on the shelf hold tinctures we blend on Wednesdays.

We try to keep packaging as honest as we can. Candles ship in unbleached cotton bags. Sage gets wrapped in paper, tied with the same linen string we use for labels. Nothing plastic touches the products if we can help it. Sometimes we have to. Shipping is hard.

A single lit beeswax candle and a smoldering palo santo bowl on a low table at golden hour

If you light a candle and feel a little quieter, we did our job.

Most of our customers come from word of mouth. People send our candles as housewarming gifts, small apologies, and “I was thinking of you” notes. We read those messages. They are the reason we keep making.

Write to us anytime. The kettle is usually on.

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