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The Impaler

A sweetness lures you nearer – black cherry dripping like darkened wine, rich as blood spilled at midnight. Yet beneath the velvet sweetness lies the iron taste of vengeance, curling like smoke through the dark. Rum-soaked decadence seeps through the heart of the night, wrapped in the breath of bruised blossoms. Tobacco and amber linger like fangs whispering across the throat, a dark perfume that binds as much as it terrifies. The air itself trembles with the promise of devastation, sweet and merciless in equal measure.
Burn time

Approximately 40 hours

Volume

180ml

Vessel

UV-protective amber glass jars with screwable lids to lock in scent

Wax

100% soy wax for a clean, natural burn with ethically sourced, cosmetic-grade mica powder in colours Black Pearl and Glitter Gold for a truly dark and enchanting melt pool

£24.00

The Story & Background

Scroll through to read more about this candle

Top notes

Black Cherry, Lemon Zest, Rhubarb, Pink Pepper, Nutmeg

Heart notes

Rosy Apple, Dark Honey, Jasmine, Marigold, Linden Blossom, Cyclamen

Base notes

Rum, Amber Resin, Sandalwood, Cinnamon, Vanilla, Tonka

E/O

Patchouli Oil, Ginger Oil

Main Accords

cherry, sweet, almond, nutty, fruity, vanilla, warm spicy, rum, amber, balsamic

Season

Autumn & Winter

Night / Day

Night

Zodiac

Scorpio, Capricorn, & Aries

In the shadow of the Carpathian peaks, where mist clings to the stone like mourning veils, a fortress rises from the mountainside. Its spires jut out into the horizon much like sharp fangs. Ravens circle its towers, crying over fields once red with conquest. Inside, by torchlight, a prince sits alone on a throne carved from oak felled by lightning. His eyes are dark as the spaces between stars. His hands rest on the armrests, stained with something that might be wine or blood.

They call him Drăculea, Son of the Dragon. Yet in the valleys below, the name twists on the tongue, becoming devil. Both seem true enough. For along the passes stand forests of stakes, bodies impaled like grotesque blossoms, their faces frozen in supplication or rage. He watches from his balcony, unmoved. Each horror is a message. Each act of cruelty, a kind of governance. When mercy is a weakness, fear must serve in its place.

But power is a hungry thing. The dark prince learns this as easily as he breathes. Nights in his fortress are long and filled with whispers – the kind that sound like prayers, or confessions, or the echo of his own heartbeat slowing. When he looks upon the candle’s flame, he sees in it something familiar: devotion, yes, but also consumption.

To rule is to devour. To love, perhaps, the same.

Centuries pass. The fortress falls to ruin. His name becomes myth, then nightmare, then story. Yet stories are a kind of resurrection. In the mind of a foreign writer, the prince stirs again. His cruelty now refined into charm; his hunger transformed into allure. Where once he raised forests of the dead, he now raises glasses of red that gleam like garnet. The warrior becomes the seducer.

And so, he endures, velvet-voiced and terrible, the scent of cherry and smoke in his wake. The sweetness that lures you nearer conceals the same iron beneath, the same taste of power and surrender.

If you listen closely on certain nights, when the wind from the east carries a scent of rum and amber, you may hear the soft echo of a toast raised long ago: To the undying, and to the ones who love them anyway.

Bram Stoker’s Dracula drew on the real Vlad III of Wallachia, a 15th-century prince known for his ruthless defence against the Ottoman Empire. Though Vlad never drank blood, tales of the strigoi (the undead of Romanian folklore) were already part of the region’s mythic landscape.

The name Dracula itself comes from “Dracul,” meaning both dragon and devil, a title passed from Vlad’s father after joining the Order of the Dragon. Stoker seized upon its dark resonance, transforming history’s warlord into literature’s immortal seducer.

Our “Impaler” candle bridges both figures: the brutal prince and the beguiling vampire. Black cherry and rum evoke aristocratic decadence, while deeper notes of tobacco, amber, and musk reveal the iron beneath the velvet. A scent crafted to be a reminder that beauty and terror often share the same breath.

The Impaler

A sweetness lures you nearer – black cherry dripping like darkened wine, rich as blood spilled at midnight. Yet beneath the velvet sweetness lies the iron taste of vengeance, curling like smoke through the dark. Rum-soaked decadence seeps through the heart of the night, wrapped in the breath of bruised blossoms. Tobacco and amber linger like fangs whispering across the throat, a dark perfume that binds as much as it terrifies. The air itself trembles with the promise of devastation, sweet and merciless in equal measure.
£24.00
Testimonials

What Our Clients Say

FAQs

Every candle has its own character, and caring for it brings out the best of its story. Below you will find answers to the questions we are asked most often, including how to burn your candle safely and how to help each fragrance unfold exactly as intended.

How should I care for my candle?

For the best burn, trim the wick to around 3 millimetres before each use. Allow the first burn to reach the edges of the jar to prevent tunnelling. Keep the candle away from drafts and never leave it unattended while lit.

All candles are hand-poured in small batches to maintain quality and consistency. During busy seasons, some scents may be poured to order so every piece arrives as fresh as possible.

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