Smoke turns into a small piece of theatre here, slipping from one angular ledge to the next like a dark waterfall in slow motion. This ceramic backflow incense burner is made for backflow cones, with a sculptural pentagon design that gives the falling smoke a clear path to follow.
The smoke as it falls
The matte black ceramic keeps the focus on the pale movement of the smoke.
Raised pentagonal forms create a stepped, geometric cascade rather than a soft natural scene.
The round base has a lifted rim, so the smoke can gather low before fading into the air.
A small cone point sits near the top, placing the source of the smoke above the falls.
It brings movement to a still shelf, meditation corner, desk or evening table.
How the backflow effect works
Backflow cones are made with a hollow channel, so the smoke travels down through the cone rather than rising straight upwards. As it cools, the smoke becomes denser than the surrounding air and sinks through the burner’s route.
For the clearest waterfall effect, place the burner in still air and use fresh backflow incense cones. A draught, damp cone or poor cone placement can interrupt the flow.
Matte ceramic with a geometric shape
The burner is ceramic, with a dark, softly textured finish and a rounded base. Its design is more architectural than decorative, using pentagon-like forms to turn the smoke into a falling pattern.
Using and caring for it
Place a backflow cone on the cone point, light the tip, then let it smoulder. Keep the burner on a stable, heat-safe surface and stay nearby while incense is burning.
After use, allow the ceramic to cool fully before cleaning. Wipe away ash and residue with a soft cloth, and handle the raised forms gently.
The waterfall idea
Incense waterfalls draw on a simple but satisfying contrast: quiet form, moving smoke. The scene recalls the mountain-and-water feeling often found in Chinese decorative art, where stillness and flow sit together. Here, that idea is…
region of manufacture: China