The Story
Fresh Air in a Bottle
The lavender you're thinking of—the one in sachets, candles, old soap bars—is concentrated, heavy, almost purple-smelling. This isn't that.
This is what lavender smells like when you stand in a field of it on a June morning. Green stems, grassy notes, a little sweet but mostly just clean air. We harvest lavender from our Kent Island farm and distill it in our Owings Mills facility. The steam pulls out the scent and leaves behind this pale, barely-there mist that smells like the plant itself, not a perfume version of it.
What Makes Our Lavender Flower Water Special?
- Farm-grown and distilled in Maryland: We grow the lavender ourselves and steam-distill it in Owings Mills. Steam passes through the harvested stems and flowers, carrying the scent molecules into a condenser where they settle into this pale mist. Small batches, checked by hand.
- Two ingredients only: Lavender distillate and aspen bark extract — the preservative. No synthetic fragrance, no fillers, no water dilution.
- Hydrosol, not essential oil: The water produced during steam distillation — gentle plant essence at a fraction of the concentration of the oil. The scent is present for a minute or two after spraying, then fades. That's how hydrosols work and that's the point.
- Multiple uses: Face mist after cleansing before moisturizer or facial oil. Body spray on damp skin after showering. Hair refresher between washes — no powder residue. Pillow spray before bed.
- Different from the lavender you're used to: This smells like standing in a lavender field — green stems, grassy, a little sweet. Not the concentrated purple-heavy scent of sachets and soap bars.
Pairs with the Bayberry Leaf Flower Water — keep both on hand for different moods and uses.
How to Use: Face: Spray after washing, before moisturizer or facial oil. Body: Mist onto skin while still slightly damp after showering. Hair: Spray into your hairbrush or directly onto dry hair. Pillow: A few sprays before bed. Keep away from direct sunlight and heat. Use within six months of opening. External use only. Discontinue if irritation occurs.

Details & Craftsmanship
Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.

Details & Craftsmanship
Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.

Details & Craftsmanship
Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.

Details & Craftsmanship
Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.

Details & Craftsmanship
Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.

Details & Craftsmanship
Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.

Details & Craftsmanship
Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.

Details & Craftsmanship
Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.

Details & Craftsmanship
Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.

Details & Craftsmanship
Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.

Details & Craftsmanship
Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.
Description
Fresh Air in a Bottle
The lavender you're thinking of—the one in sachets, candles, old soap bars—is concentrated, heavy, almost purple-smelling. This isn't that.
This is what lavender smells like when you stand in a field of it on a June morning. Green stems, grassy notes, a little sweet but mostly just clean air. We harvest lavender from our Kent Island farm and distill it in our Owings Mills facility. The steam pulls out the scent and leaves behind this pale, barely-there mist that smells like the plant itself, not a perfume version of it.
What Makes Our Lavender Flower Water Special?
- Farm-grown and distilled in Maryland: We grow the lavender ourselves and steam-distill it in Owings Mills. Steam passes through the harvested stems and flowers, carrying the scent molecules into a condenser where they settle into this pale mist. Small batches, checked by hand.
- Two ingredients only: Lavender distillate and aspen bark extract — the preservative. No synthetic fragrance, no fillers, no water dilution.
- Hydrosol, not essential oil: The water produced during steam distillation — gentle plant essence at a fraction of the concentration of the oil. The scent is present for a minute or two after spraying, then fades. That's how hydrosols work and that's the point.
- Multiple uses: Face mist after cleansing before moisturizer or facial oil. Body spray on damp skin after showering. Hair refresher between washes — no powder residue. Pillow spray before bed.
- Different from the lavender you're used to: This smells like standing in a lavender field — green stems, grassy, a little sweet. Not the concentrated purple-heavy scent of sachets and soap bars.
Pairs with the Bayberry Leaf Flower Water — keep both on hand for different moods and uses.
How to Use: Face: Spray after washing, before moisturizer or facial oil. Body: Mist onto skin while still slightly damp after showering. Hair: Spray into your hairbrush or directly onto dry hair. Pillow: A few sprays before bed. Keep away from direct sunlight and heat. Use within six months of opening. External use only. Discontinue if irritation occurs.




