Beeswax usually burns the longest among common candle wax types when candle size, wick, vessel, wax mass, fragrance load, and burn schedule are comparable. Candle wax types are wax bases used as...
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A candle wick usually leans because placement, tab adhesion, cooling wax, drafts, or burn heat moved it off-center; fix a burning candle only after extinguishing it. A candle wick is the strand...
Yes, you can add coconut oil to candle wax in small weighed test amounts, but it can change softness, scent behavior, wick performance, and burn results. Coconut oil is an additive oil, while...
If you do not consider yourself a candle enthusiast but want to enjoy the scents they offer, you can join the wax melt trend. They are scented pieces of wax that are wick-less and are melted in a...
A gel candle turns cloudy when its clear gel structure is disrupted by fragrance oil, overheating, contamination, additives, trapped air, cooling conditions, or wax-grade mismatch. A gel candle is...
Candle wax usually does not dry through water evaporation; it sets fast when melted wax loses heat before it has time to level, stay workable, or finish the pour. Common causes include low pour...
