01 / Botanical identity
Clove brings strong spice identity and Indonesian relevance.
Clove is a powerful material for wellness blends that need warmth, strength, protection, and a recognizable spice note with clear origin value.
02 / Genus and family
Syzygium in Myrtaceae gives clove a precise aromatic lineage.
Botanical naming separates clove bud material from generic spice language and helps buyers discuss oil direction with more confidence.
03 / Bud structure
The flower bud explains why clove feels concentrated.
Clove is harvested before the flower opens. That bud identity gives the material a compact, intense, and memorable product story.
04 / Drying discipline
Post-harvest treatment controls the spice impression.
Drying affects color, aroma clarity, and perceived cleanliness. A good clove profile should feel strong but not rough.
05 / Eugenol direction
Eugenol defines the clove signature.
Clove oil is usually discussed through eugenol-rich chemistry, supported by esters and sesquiterpenes that create roundness and depth.
06 / Formulation control
A dominant material needs careful dosage and clear guidance.
Clove can overpower a blend quickly. ArtoOil positions it as a disciplined spice material for focused wellness products.
07 / Product role
Clove supports protective, warm, and confident blends.
The material can strengthen diffuser, massage, seasonal wellness, and immune-support directions when balanced with softer oils.
08 / Quality read
Good clove should feel clean, warm, and full-bodied.
A clean clove direction avoids stale, dusty, or overly medicinal impressions while keeping the spice identity clear.
09 / Product translation
A spice bud becomes a memorable ArtoOil ingredient story.
Use clove when a blend needs confident warmth, origin relevance, and an ingredient customers can recognize immediately.
10 / Plant parts
Know which part of the plant shapes the product.
The dried flower bud is the commercial hero. Its shape and harvest timing communicate why clove feels concentrated and powerful.
The rounded bud head carries the visual identity customers recognize and helps explain clove as a pre-flower material.
The narrow tube gives the bud its nail-like form and supports the material's strong visual memorability.
Drying changes color, texture, and aromatic intensity, making post-harvest handling central to the quality story.
11 / Dominant aroma chemistry
Key aroma compounds help buyers understand the profile.
The dominant spicy phenolic molecule behind clove's powerful character.
A sweeter clove-like ester that rounds the profile.
A woody-spicy sesquiterpene that adds body.
A dry woody support note often discussed alongside clove oil chemistry.
An oxygenated sesquiterpene direction useful for mature spice nuance.
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.