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Reaper Backflow Incense Burner 6 Inch — a cold-cast resin backflow incense burner shaped as a Grim Reaper with skulls, designed to create a cascading smoke waterfall effect when used with backflow cone incense. At 6 inches this makes a dramatic centerpiece for gothic and ancestor altars, samhain ritual spaces, or dark aesthetic home decor. The downward-flowing smoke creates a mesmerizing ritual focal point.
Description:
Quick Specs
Size: 6 inches tall
Type: Backflow Incense Burner
Material: Polyresin
Design: Gnarled tree trunk with skulls, bones, and reaper figure
Includes: Starter backflow cones
Best For: Ancestor work, shadow practice, meditation, altar display
When the Smoke Goes Down
Backflow incense burners work on a straightforward principle of thermodynamics: backflow cones are hollow through the center, and the cooler, denser smoke they produce sinks rather than rises. Set one in the chamber at the top of this piece, light the tip, and within a minute the smoke begins pooling downward through the hollow channel, curling around the twisted roots and skulls as it goes. It looks like something out of a fever dream, but the physics are simple and reliable.
I stock this piece specifically because the aesthetic lines up with a real tradition of working with death imagery in a grounded, non-theatrical way. Skulls and bones appear in Dia de los Muertos altars, in Haitian Vodou, in Tibetan Buddhist practice, and in many strands of folk magic that treat death as a teacher rather than a threat. This burner doesn't belong to any one of those traditions, but if you use your altar to honor ancestors, mark transitions, or sit with the harder edges of life, this piece fits that work without irony.
It's also just striking as a decor object. The gnarled trunk, the embedded skulls, the cascading smoke, all of it reads as intentional and considered. If you're pairing it with backflow cones from my shop or building out a darker-themed altar space, it holds its own next to other pieces in my backflow burner collection.
How to Use the Reaper Backflow Burner
Use your Reaper backflow burner for meditation, altar work, or ancestor practice with these steps.
Set Up Your Burner
Place the burner on a heat-safe, level surface away from drafts. The smoke flows downward, so keep the area below the burner clear. A small tray or tile underneath helps contain any ash and makes cleanup simple.
Light the Backflow Cone
Set a backflow cone in the burner's top chamber and light the tip. Blow out the flame after a few seconds and let it smolder. Within a minute, smoke will begin flowing downward through the hollow base, pooling around the skulls and roots.
Work with the Smoke
As the smoke cascades down, use it for intention-setting, ancestor work, or simply as a meditative focal point. Let the cone burn completely. When done, allow the ash to cool before clearing it, and wipe the burner gently with a dry cloth.
The Tarot Fellow Standard
I carry this burner because the casting quality is consistent and the detail work holds up under real use. The skulls don't blur, the paint doesn't peel off in transit, and the smoke channel stays clear. I've handled enough resin pieces to know when a mold is being pushed past its useful life, and this one isn't. The proportions are deliberate: at 6 inches, it's substantial without dominating a small altar space.
One practical note: backflow cones burn cooler and slower than standard cones, which means less smoke overall. If you're in a larger room and expecting a dramatic fog effect, you'll get a controlled, elegant stream, not a cloud. That's a feature for most uses, but it's worth knowing before you set your expectations. The starter cones included are a reasonable introduction to how the piece performs.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need special cones for a backflow burner?
Yes, you need backflow cones, which are hollow through the center so smoke travels down instead of up. Regular cones won't produce the waterfall effect. Starter cones are included, and I carry additional backflow cones separately.
Is this burner safe to use indoors?
Yes, with reasonable precautions. Keep it on a stable, heat-safe surface and never leave burning incense unattended. The resin body stays cool, but the cone is lit, so keep it away from flammable materials and out of reach of pets and children.
What is the burner made of?
It's cast from polyresin, which allows for fine skull and bone detail. Polyresin handles low-heat applications like incense well, holds paint without chipping under normal use, and is much lighter than ceramic at a similar size.
How do I clean a backflow incense burner?
Let the burner cool fully, then remove loose ash with a soft brush or dry cloth. For residue inside the cone chamber, a cotton swab works well. Avoid soaking the resin in water, as prolonged moisture can affect the paint finish over time.