A flower you can hold is worth
a hundred ingredients you can't see.
What happens when you steep
Turns water ruby in sixty seconds
Deep indigo — add lemon, watch it turn violet
Golden calm in a cup
Each one a story you can steep, cook, apply, or gift. Sourced from named farms and regions across India. Shadow-dried to preserve what matters.
Hibiscus sabdariffa
Hibiscus
Tamil Nadu · Andhra Pradesh
Lowers blood pressure. Vitamin C. Hair growth.
Clitoria ternatea
Butterfly Pea
Tamil Nadu · Kerala
Antioxidant. Memory. Natural blue dye.
Rosa damascena
Pushkar Rose
Pushkar · Rajasthan
Cooling. Digestive. Skin glow.
Matricaria chamomilla
Chamomile
Himachal Pradesh · Kashmir
Sleep. Calm. Anti-inflammatory.
Jasminum sambac
Mogra Jasmine
Madurai · Tamil Nadu
Calming. Antidepressant. Fragrant.
Crocus sativus
Pampore Saffron
Pampore · Kashmir
Mood. Complexion. Memory.
Calendula officinalis
Marigold
Karnataka · Maharashtra
Wound healing. Skin repair. Eye health.
Nelumbo nucifera
Sacred Lotus
Kashmir · Manipur
Calming. Liver support. Sacred.
Butea monosperma
Palash
Madhya Pradesh · Jharkhand
Skin purifier. Detox. The original Holi colour.
Pushkar, Rajasthan
Rosa damascena · Damask Rose
The same alkaline desert soil that makes Bulgarian and Turkish Damask roses command six thousand dollars per kilogram for their oil. Pushkar's roses bloom for eight weeks between February and April.
Each flower is hand-picked before dawn, when the oils are at their peak. Shadow-dried on cotton cloth under tree canopy — never in direct sun, which would destroy the volatile compounds that make the difference between medicine and mulch.
When you steep these petals, the water turns pale blush pink. That's the anthocyanin. That's the proof.
Tea & Infusions
Every flower produces a different colour, a different aroma, a different benefit. No tea bags. No dust. You see the flower open in the water — that's how you know it's real.
Butterfly Pea, Hibiscus, Chamomile, Chrysanthemum, Rose, Jasmine, Lavender
Explore Infusions
Skincare & Beauty
Rose for glow. Marigold for repair. Lotus for calm. These are the same flowers that Ayurvedic formulations have used for three thousand years — before they were ground into capsules and stripped of context.
Rose, Marigold, Lotus, Hibiscus
See Beauty Flowers
Cooking & Culinary
Banana blossom for a Kerala thoran. Saffron threads dropped into warm milk. Moringa flowers in sambar. These are not garnishes — they are ingredients with nutritional weight and culinary history.
Banana Blossom, Pumpkin Blossom, Moringa, Saffron
Browse Culinary Flowers
Premium Gifting
Saffron from Pampore. Rose from Pushkar. Lavender from Kashmir. Curated in glass and linen — not plastic and cardboard. A gift that says: I know what this is, and I think you should too.
Saffron, Rose, Lavender, Lotus, Jasmine
See Gift CollectionsShadow-drying preserves volatile oils. Sun-drying destroys them. The difference between a chamomile flower that calms you and one that tastes like straw is four hours and a patch of shade.
Every flower in our collection is dried on cotton cloth, under tree canopy or covered drying racks. Temperature never exceeds 35°C. Airflow is constant. The flower loses its water but keeps its soul — the colour, the aroma, the compounds that three thousand years of Ayurveda trusted.
This is why our saffron threads are crimson, not brown. Why our rose petals are pink, not grey. Why our butterfly pea still turns water indigo after six months on a shelf.
Our palette is not designed. It is harvested.
Saffron is sold by the thread. Rose by the petal. Jasmine by the bud. These are not bulk commodities weighed on digital scales — they are precious materials, hand-counted and hand-packed.
When something costs more per gram than silver, you treat it like silver. Brass scales. Glass jars. Cork stoppers. The packaging honours the content.
Start with one. Steep it. See what happens. The flower is the proof.
Steep Your First Flower