Current:Home > MarketsMeet Your New Favorite Candle Brand: Emme NYC Makes Everything From Lychee to Durian Scents -WealthSphere Pro
Meet Your New Favorite Candle Brand: Emme NYC Makes Everything From Lychee to Durian Scents
View
Date:2025-04-19 23:43:01
We interviewed Emme NYC because we think you'll like their picks. The products featured in this article are from brands available in NBCUniversal Checkout. E! makes a commission on purchases.
In 2019, Emme NYC founders Erica Luo and Mark Fuqua moved from San Francisco to New York. Then the pandemic hit. The couple found themselves feeling homesick for the scents of their Asian-American upbringing, but the candles at everyday retailers just weren’t cutting it.
“We started off by burning whatever we could find off the shelves from department stores,” explains Luo. “And every time we did find a candle, it was always mixed with maybe a flower, or something like a vanilla or lavender base—something that didn’t really capture the authentic essence of the smells we were looking for and grew up with.”
Thus, Emme NYC was born. The AAPI-owned brand makes candles, diffusers, and hand washes in scents that might be familiar (or new!) to you, and are largely inspired by the Asian community, its foods, and its rituals.
“We actually started with [the scent] honey and jasmine,” the candle brand founder explains. “It was a very popular boba drink at the time. That’s where the inspiration came from, and how the Asian angle really got started.”
Emme NYC’s line of scents is as extensive as it is mouthwatering. Customers can shop everything from treat-inspired mochi, red bean, bingsu, and almond biscuit candles, to nature-inspired scents such as hinoki, bamboo, sakura, and chrysanthemum—and so much more.
For those who aren’t familiar with the fruit, durian is a spiky tropical fruit considered to be one of the smelliest fruits in the world. However, its flavor when eaten has been described as custardy and sweet.
“Every time we do a marketplace and see customers’ reactions in real time, they pick it up and are pleasantly surprised because they have such a strong negative connotation with that smell,” she says.
“But they’re like, ‘oh, actually, this is pretty… it’s a nice, pleasant scent.’ So I think what we aim to do with the brand is to rewrite these stereotypes of the smells we have.”
Want your own Emme NYC scent recommendations? Look to the founders for some inspiration.
Luo is a self-admitted “floral girly,” and her favorite Emme NYC scent is jasmine tea, “just because it’s fresh,” she says. “I think it’s very universal, and it’s not just for girls. We have a lot of guys who enjoy the softness of the floral.”
She explains that her husband Fuqua “really likes bamboo.”
“It’s very inviting,” she says. “We went to a conference, and we sampled the soaps in the bamboo fragrance. We had people lining up to buy it before it was even launched.”
Emme NYC’s candles are toxin-free, paraben-free, phthalate-free, cruelty-free, vegan, and pet-safe—a choice inspired by the couple’s own needs, but one that can end up benefiting everyone.
“We’re the ones making it, we were the ones testing it, and we were the ones using it in our homes. So we didn’t want to have a lot of the chemicals typically found in paraffin wax candles from department stores,” Luo explains.
Shop our Emme NYC favorites
Ready to explore scents that evoke nostalgia and make your home smell really, really good? Discover Emme NYC’s line of unique, culturally inspired candles below.
veryGood! (65)
Related
- Former Syrian official arrested in California who oversaw prison charged with torture
- Ford Executive Chair Bill Ford gets involved in union contract talks during an uncommon presentation
- Women’s voices being heard at Vatican’s big meeting on church’s future, nun says
- 'False sense of calm': How social media misleads Mexican migrants about crossing US border
- Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
- Answers About Old Gas Sites Repurposed as Injection Wells for Fracking’s Toxic Wastewater May Never Be Fully Unearthed
- Trump’s Iowa campaign ramps up its organizing after his infamously chaotic 2016 second-place effort
- What is the 'healthiest' Halloween candy? Don't get tricked by these other treats.
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- If you hope to retire in the next couple of years, here's what you should be doing now
Ranking
- Apple iOS 18.2: What to know about top features, including Genmoji, AI updates
- Israeli couple who were killed protecting their twin babies from Hamas gunmen were heroes, family says
- A British man pleads guilty to Islamic State-related terrorism charges
- Jack Trice Stadium in Iowa remains only major college football stadium named for a Black man
- Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
- Mary Lou Retton's Family Shares Remarkable Update Amid Gymnast's Battle With Rare Illness
- See Lisa Rinna's Horrifying Return to TV After Real Housewives of Beverly Hills Exit
- 1-year-old child among 3 killed when commercial building explodes in southwest Kansas
Recommendation
South Korean president's party divided over defiant martial law speech
Boyfriend arrested after Northern California sheriff’s deputy found dead at her home
Train derailment closes down I-25 in Colorado, semi-truck driver killed
Israel warns northern Gaza residents to leave, tells U.N. 1.1 million residents should evacuate within 24 hours
Federal appeals court upholds $14.25 million fine against Exxon for pollution in Texas
NYPD celebrates members of Hispanic heritage
Myanmar’s military seeks to keep ethnic minority allies on its side with anniversary of cease-fire
Israeli rabbis work around the clock -- even on the Sabbath -- to count the dead from Hamas attack