Linen Lavender Drawer Sachet
Garden lavender, dried slow, filled into linen the week you order.
$18.00
Filled to order. Ships every Monday.
BATCH 2026-05
LAVENDER BLEND, EL DORADO HILLS GARDEN
FRENCH + SPANISH + LAVANDIN, IN-GROUND
CUT AND DRIED MAY 2026
INGREDIENTS: DRIED LAVENDER, LINEN POUCH, COTTON DRAWSTRING
FILLED TO ORDER, EL DORADO HILLS, CA
A drawer sachet, the way it should be. Lavender cut from the garden, dried slow on screens until the oils set, filled into a linen pouch the week you order. It smells like lavender from a working garden, not lavender from a candle aisle. Cool and clean up front, a little resinous behind, no perfume edge.
This batch is a blend of three lavenders from three places in the garden. French (Lavandula dentata) lines the stairs opposite the Spanish rosemary, carries through the heat better than the others, and gives the blend most of its volume. Spanish lavender (Lavandula stoechas) borders the southeast fence beside the garden beds, with bunny-ear bracts and a sharper resin note. Lavandin (Lavandula × intermedia) holds the south end of the nursery and pushes the perfume up.
Ways to use it
A drawer sachet is meant to be moved around. Put one in any closed space that holds fabric or paper, and the lavender does its job quietly for months.
- Tucked between folded sweaters or linens in a drawer
- Slipped into the pocket of a suit or coat you do not wear often
- Set on the closet shelf where the seasonal coats live
- Inside a suitcase between trips
- Under the pillow for a few nights when the garden is between blooms
More uses, plus how to refresh a tired sachet and when to refill
What's in it
Dried lavender, a blend of French (Lavandula dentata), Spanish (Lavandula stoechas), and Lavandin (Lavandula × intermedia) cut from the El Dorado Hills garden. Unbleached linen pouch, roughly four inches square. Cotton drawstring. No fillers. No essential oils added. No fragrance other than what the plant carries.
Care and keeping
Squeeze the sachet gently between two fingers when the scent starts to fade. The crushed buds release fresh oil. Most sachets refresh this way three or four times before the lavender is spent.
When it stops responding to the squeeze, untie the drawstring and refill from a fresh harvest. Or compost the lavender and reuse the pouch for the next batch.
What else is ready
The Spanish rosemary syrup is back in stock from the May cook-down. The English lavender from the front beds is reserved for cooking, and the first lavender simple syrup goes in the pot later this summer. The lavender tincture is steeping in the pantry, ready to come off the bench in late June. We'll send word when the next things land.
For wholesale orders, gift basket placements, or retail partnerships, write to us.