Incense Holders and Burners: Stick, Cone and Backflow Styles
Our incense holders collection covers every format, from simple wooden ash catchers for stick incense to decorative brass and ceramic cone burners and the eye-catching backflow burners that send smoke pouring downwards. Whichever incense you prefer, the right holder catches the ash safely and looks good on a shelf, altar or windowsill. It pairs naturally with our incense sticks and cones range and our wider home fragrance collection. Burning incense is a small daily ritual for a lot of people, so the holder is worth getting right rather than treating as an afterthought.
Stick and Cone Burners
Stick burners are the most popular choice and the easiest to live with. A boat-shaped ash catcher holds one stick at a time and collects the ash as it falls, so there is very little to clean up afterwards. Cone burners tend to be small dishes or covered pieces designed to sit the cone on a heat-safe surface. Materials make a real difference here: wood is warm and lightweight, brass and metal feel solid and age well, and ceramic is easy to wipe clean. If you burn incense daily, a holder with a deep, enclosed ash channel keeps shelves and surfaces tidier than an open tray. It is also worth matching the holder to the length of stick you usually buy, since an undersized catcher leaves ash falling short of the tray.
Backflow Burners and Decorative Pieces
Backflow burners are the showpiece of the collection. Used with special backflow cones, the smoke flows downwards like a slow waterfall, often over a sculpted scene such as a mountain, dragon or waterfall. They need backflow cones specifically, since standard cones will not produce the effect, so it is worth picking up both together from our backflow burners and cones range. Alongside the burners there are decorative holders that double as ornaments when not in use, which suits anyone who wants the piece to earn its shelf space all year. Heavier ceramic and resin designs also sit more stably, which matters with anything involving a lit cone.
Choosing a Holder for Your Space
Match the holder to where it will live. A long stick catcher suits a narrow shelf or windowsill, a compact cone dish works on a bedside table, and a backflow burner wants a clear, flat surface with space around it. Think about cleaning too: enclosed metal and ceramic wipe down quickly, while intricate carved wood needs a soft brush. If incense is part of a daily wind-down routine, a holder you find genuinely attractive is the one you will actually keep using. If you are buying as a gift, a holder paired with a few packs of sticks or cones makes a complete, ready-to-use present rather than half of one.