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LUSH’s Eid Al-Adha bath bombs Sukoon and Siraj celebrate self-care

Lush’s Eid bombs feel less like a seasonal drop than a co-created statement. Ramsha Khan and Andreea Martin shape the scent, symbolism, and mood.

Nina Kowalski5 min read
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LUSH’s Eid Al-Adha bath bombs Sukoon and Siraj celebrate self-care
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Why these two bath bombs matter

Lush’s Eid al-Adha line is doing more than changing up a scent profile for the season. By centering Sukoon and Siraj, the brand is using bath bombs as the clearest proof that the range was co-created by staff who celebrate Eid, with the stated goal of promoting diversity, inclusion, equity, and belonging through authentic community stories.

Sukoon and Siraj also sit at the sharpest intersection of the launch’s business and its identity work. Each bomb is priced at $4.50, sized at 1.4 ounces, and positioned as part of Lush’s 2026 Eid al-Adha collection, which extends into soaps, shower gels, scrubs, masks, massage bars, knot wraps, and gifts. That wider assortment matters, but the bath bombs are still the line’s most immediate storytelling objects: small, giftable, and loaded with symbols that do real cultural work.

Sukoon: peace, moonlight, and the Sticky Date payoff

Sukoon is the gentler of the two in mood, but not in intent. Lush describes it as a crescent moon that brings peace to nighttime baths, with sparkling dark blue and silver waters and the sweet Sticky Date scent, and says it was created by Ramsha Khan after she participated in a Muslim focus group through the Co-Create initiative. Ramsha’s design choices lean hard into symbolism: the crescent moon, the emphasis on reflection and prayer, and the idea that the bomb should speak to the many regions that celebrate Eid.

That is what keeps Sukoon from reading like a generic holiday product with a borrowed theme. The object itself carries the meaning, from the moon shape to the color story to the scent that gives it a familiar Lush identity instead of a vague festive perfume. Ramsha frames Eid al-Adha as a time for reflection, prayer, community, and forgiveness, and the bath bomb translates that into a bath ritual that feels calm, deliberate, and communal rather than merely decorative.

What Ramsha Khan shaped

Ramsha Khan’s role goes beyond authoring a mood board. Lush identifies her as the creator of Sukoon and ties her to both the Muslim focus group and the company’s Co-Create program, which is important because it shows the product is not just inspired by Eid, but shaped by someone inside the community the collection is meant to honor. The crescent motif, the reflective tone, and the choice of Sticky Date all point to a bath bomb built from lived reference points, not a shallow seasonal cue.

Siraj: the star, the blessing, and the bigger philosophical swing

Siraj takes a different route, and that difference is the whole point. Lush describes it as a star-themed bath bomb that sends out purple and glittery golden waters, again with the sweet Sticky Date scent, and says it was invented by Andreea Martin through the same Muslim focus group and Co-Create process. The name adds another layer of intent: Lush says Siraj means lamp light and brings guidance, which makes the product feel less like a random seasonal shape and more like a symbol with a specific spiritual mood.

Andreea’s framing pushes the product deeper into self-care as a cultural practice rather than a retail slogan. She describes Siraj as a reminder that everything unfolds as it is meant to be, and connects the bath bomb to the idea that self-care is cherished in Islam. That is a concrete product decision, not just a marketing line: the star imagery, the destiny language, and the sparkling colorway all reinforce a ritual built around gratitude, reflection, and blessing.

What the formulas tell bath-bomb fans

For bath-bomb fans, the chemistry is part of the pleasure, and Lush keeps the formula language reassuringly familiar. Both bombs rely on the classic fizz base of sodium bicarbonate and citric acid, then layer in carob resinoid, benzoin resinoid, sandalwood oil, and the company’s fragrance system, with shimmer and color ingredients such as synthetic fluorphlogopite, titanium dioxide, tin oxide, and the blue, red, and iron oxide colorants that create the sparkle payoff. Lush also labels both products self-preserving and made fresh, and says they stay effective without added synthetic preservatives.

That formula detail matters because it keeps the bombs in the core Lush tradition. Sukoon and Siraj are both described as smaller than the average bath bomb, but still “mighty in fragrance,” which makes them feel built for a single, high-impact soak rather than a sprawling spa routine. The company also gives clear storage guidance, telling buyers to keep the bombs fresh and dry until use, which is exactly the kind of practical detail bath-bomb shoppers look for when they are deciding whether a limited-edition release is worth picking up.

Naked, giftable, and deliberately low-waste

The packaging story is just as central as the fizz. Sukoon and Siraj arrive naked and packaging-free, which fits Lush’s anti-packaging philosophy and makes them feel gift-ready without the extra waste of a box or wrapper. Both product pages also note that transit protection uses packing peanuts made from corn starch rather than polystyrene, and the broader Eid page folds the bombs into a wider assortment built for reflective, celebratory self-care.

That is why this launch reads as more than seasonal merchandising. Lush is clearly using Eid to tell a full bath-and-body story, but the bath bombs remain the most legible proof of the company’s co-creation model because they are small, symbolic, fragrance-forward, and easy to gift. For shoppers looking for culturally respectful self-care, the combination of named creators, specific symbolic choices, and packaging-free presentation gives Sukoon and Siraj a level of authorship that a standard limited-edition drop rarely reaches.

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