ArtoOil
Botanicals

Botanical material profile

Cinnamon Stick

Cinnamomum verum

A warm spice profile for immune-support and comfort blends, built around cinnamon bark, cinnamaldehyde character, and premium aromatic warmth.

GenusCinnamomumSpeciesCinnamomum verumFamilyLauraceae

01 / Botanical identity

Cinnamon gives a blend immediate warmth and product confidence.

Cinnamon is useful for products that need a comforting spice direction, especially immune-support, winter wellness, massage, diffuser, and grounding aromatic concepts.

02 / Genus and family

Cinnamomum in Lauraceae gives the bark a precise source identity.

Clear botanical naming helps buyers distinguish cinnamon bark direction from generic spice language and makes the material easier to specify.

03 / Bark architecture

The material story starts with the inner bark.

Cinnamon's value is not in a flower or leaf. It comes from bark preparation, quill formation, drying, and the aromatic quality preserved through handling.

04 / Quill handling

Drying quality turns bark into a premium ingredient cue.

Good cinnamon material should look intentional, clean, and well-handled. That visual discipline supports the warm aroma customers expect.

05 / Aromatic aldehydes

Cinnamaldehyde defines the warm-spice signature.

The dominant chemistry gives cinnamon its familiar warmth, while eugenol, esters, and woody terpenes add depth for blend development.

06 / Production caution

A strong spice material needs responsible formulation.

Cinnamon is powerful. Buyer-facing product language should communicate warmth and strength while keeping usage guidance controlled and professional.

07 / Formulation value

Cinnamon anchors comfort, warmth, and protective rituals.

The material is especially useful when a product needs a confident spice backbone without losing polish or sensory balance.

08 / Quality read

Good cinnamon should feel warm, clean, sweet, and rounded.

A harsh or dusty impression weakens the premium story. The best product direction keeps cinnamon recognizable but controlled.

09 / Product translation

Bark material becomes a bold wellness product signal.

Use cinnamon when an ArtoOil blend needs a warm, familiar, protective aromatic identity that customers understand quickly.

10 / Plant parts

Know which part of the plant shapes the product.

Inner bark

The inner bark is the commercial material. It carries the recognizable warm-spice identity that customers connect with comfort and strength.

Quill structure

Rolled quills communicate drying quality, handling discipline, and the premium visual identity of cinnamon material.

Cut surface

The cut surface helps explain why bark thickness, dryness, and storage influence the final aromatic impression.

Woody support

The woody structure gives context for cinnamon as bark material rather than a leaf or flower ingredient.

11 / Dominant aroma chemistry

Key aroma compounds help buyers understand the profile.

Cinnamaldehyde

The signature warm, sweet-spicy aldehyde behind cinnamon bark character.

Eugenol

A clove-like spicy phenol that can support warmth and intensity.

Cinnamyl acetate

A sweet balsamic ester that rounds the bark profile.

Linalool

A softer floral-terpenic support note in some cinnamon profiles.

beta-Caryophyllene

A woody-spicy sesquiterpene that adds depth to the material story.

12 / Complete ingredient story

Choose the botanical direction for your next ArtoOil blend.

Use this plant profile to discuss samples, blend direction, aroma positioning, and the production notes your retail or wellness product needs before launch.