There are few businesses on the mountain with such a unique offering as Smellbound: from its signature fragrant candles to its variety of home décor items and even a new café, there really is something for everyone. Pam Gill, owner, shares the story of how such a fascinating collection came to be.
by Kyle Hitchmough
How long have you owned Smellbound?
About seven years, but itâs a very new location. We moved here in January, when we bought these three shops and converted them into one.
What was your inspiration to open the store?
I started making candles as a hobby after I retired, and it just grew into a website, then into a shop, then from a little shop into a big shop. Then I integrated other products that customers told me they wanted. And now thereâs a cafĂ© to top it off.
You also have a sizable number of other items in stock?
Thatâs right. Home decor, gemstones, itâs a bit of everything. People can come in and it doesnât matter what they like, theyâre going to find a little bit of something they want. From coffee plants to Buddhas to gems to candles to homewares, a nice cup of coffee while theyâre here, and weâve just applied for a liquor license, so hopefully local wines, cheeses and antipasto.
Can you tell us more about the cafĂ© that youâve just opened? What kinds of food and drink do you sell?
Gourmet pies, homemade salads, continental cakesâ again, homemade by a local lady. Any sort of coffee or milkshake or frappe that you can imagine. And itâs growing as we get people coming in asking for different things and we think âGood idea! Weâll pop that on the menu.â Weâre open to change.
Do you intend to further expand this lineup, especially with the liquor license you mentioned?
People queue for food up here, so weâre going to put a barbecue out the back and they can come in and have anything from just a sausage sandwich, right up to an eye fillet with homemade salads. Weâll have someone out the back cooking it in that rotunda, and a nice glass of wine or beer on tap. Itâll be inexpensive and give another opportunity for something different to do up on the mountain.
You have a number of items that fall under the spiritual umbrella too. Can you tell us more about that?
Thatâs my daughterâs input. She also works here with me, which is great because she does the clothes, the fashion, the spiritualistic things. Sheâs in her 30s and Iâm 70, so I appeal to the older people with what I put into the shop, and she buys what the younger generation want. I trust her implicitly, and it all goes together well.
Tamborine Mountain is known for its subculture of spirituality. Why do you think that is?
I think itâs well known for it. There are quite a few shops that cater for it, including this lovely new one thatâs being built next door to us. I think itâs the sort of thing people come to the mountain for. They want that something thatâs a little bit different, and they want something that says Mount Tamborine, thatâs why nearly every single one of our products has got âhomemade with love on Mount Tamborineâ on it. Itâs a huge selling point.
Whatâs your most popular or bestselling item?
Definitely the candles. We have a rather original concept too that nobody else does, which is very environmentally friendly and also economical, in that when people buy a candle from us we encourage them to bring the container back and weâll refill it for around half the price of the original purchase. Weâve got over 300 different fragrances and essential and fragrant oils, they can choose whatever fragrance they like, we refill the candle with top quality soy wax and reuse the same container so theyâre saving money themselves plus itâs extremely environmentally friendly.
Is there a notably popular option amongst the candles?
Is there ever! Itâs been the fragrance of the week for three and a half years, and its lemongrass and Persian lime. Itâs a very nice blend thatâs not overpowering, so it suits men and women, itâs just a very fresh fragrance that everyone seems to like. People come back for it every time.
Do you have a personal favourite thing to do on the mountain?
Oh, the walking and the botanical gardens are absolutely stunning. I take my grandchildren and we go down there for lunch. Itâs really stunning, and itâs all free.
What do you think a store like Smellbound really provides to the area?
I think itâs a very big draw card for Gallery Walk, because the people who come to my shop specifically to have their candles refilled or for breakfast will do the whole street. The other thing I offer is a fair bit of parking. Thatâs a great attraction. Having the access ramp here is something else a lot of shops donât have, and we get a lot of people with disabilities coming in bus tours, and theyâre able to access the shop. Weâve got a nice garden bar out the back which weâve just set up, and theyâll quite often sit out there, and theyâre able to access it all, which is great.
Do you have any other plans for directions Smellbound might expand?
Weâve been asked a lot by people âwhere can we learn how to make candles?â and Iâve decided to start candle making classes since the demand is huge. People come up here in groups on weekends or for a wedding and they want to do something together. Weâre going to limit it to 5 people per class, make it very personalised. Itâll be about two hours and theyâll walk away with about $75 worth of candles to keep, so itâs an experience.
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