
Tinctures
Liquid extracts dosed by dropper — sublingual or added to food and drink.
What tinctures are, and how they behave.
Tinctures are concentrated cannabis extracts in a carrier — usually MCT oil, occasionally alcohol or glycerin — packaged with a calibrated dropper. They were the dominant cannabis medicine of the pre-prohibition era and are now back as the format of choice for wellness use and ratio-based dosing (1:1 CBD:THC, 4:1, 20:1).
Held under the tongue for 60–90 seconds, tinctures absorb through the mucous membranes and onset in 15–45 minutes — faster than edibles, slower than inhalation. Swallowed straight or stirred into food, they behave more like an edible, with the slower, longer-acting metabolic arc.
Tinctures are the easiest format to dose precisely. A dropper labeled 1 ml / 20 mg means each 0.25 ml dose is 5 mg. CBD-forward tinctures are the format most often used by people who don't want to feel high — for sleep, anxious patterns, or low-grade physical pain.

Other categories
- CategoryVapes
Inhaled cannabis oil delivered through a battery-heated coil or ceramic element.
Browse → - CategoryEdibles
Cannabis ingested through food or drink. Slow onset, long arc, easier to misjudge.
Browse → - CategoryConcentrates
High-potency cannabis extracts — solventless rosin, hydrocarbon live resin, and everything between.
Browse → - CategoryPre-rolls
Ready-to-smoke joints — single strain, infused, or blended packs.
Browse → - CategoryTopicals
Creams, balms, and patches applied to skin. Local relief, no head-high.
Browse → - CategoryAccessories
The hardware: grinders, papers, pipes, vaporizers, storage, and the rest of the kit.
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