a technical notebook
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9 years ago
9 years ago
9 years ago
  1. Sunday, December 28, 2014
  2. =========================
  3. candles & candlemaking
  4. ----------------------
  5. A year ago at Christmastime, I decided to see what kind of candlemaking
  6. supplies were still at my parents' house, and wound up digging a couple of big
  7. Rubbermaid tubs worth of molds, dyes, additives, wick, wax, &c out of the
  8. basement.
  9. I used to do this a lot, but I've mostly forgotten the details of technique.
  10. Rough notes:
  11. - Wax temperature when pouring is important. I'm aiming for 210-220 F
  12. with metal molds, but it's hard to get there with the little hot plate I'm
  13. using. I can usually get it just over 200, according to the thermometer
  14. I've got. This doesn't seem to be doing too much damage, but I do think
  15. the results would be a little better with hotter wax.
  16. - You're supposed to use a proper double boiler or a purpose-built wax melter.
  17. I put various sizes of can in some water in a medium size pan.
  18. - I remember that I used to melt wax on the woodstove in my dad's shop, but if
  19. so we must have been running the stove hotter in those days or I had a lot
  20. more patience. it does work well for holding wax at a reasonable
  21. temperature until you have to do a second pour.
  22. - With metal molds, keeping the wax from streaming out the wick hole at the
  23. bottom is often kind of problematic. I think you're supposed to affix the
  24. wicking with a little screw and put some tacky putty-type stuff over the
  25. screw, but if you're low on the putty or don't have just the right size
  26. screw this doesn't work so great. Things tried this time around: The
  27. remaining putty and then everything kind of smashed down on a wood block
  28. (Ben's idea), pouring a little wax in the bottom and letting it harden first,
  29. the wrong size screw, silicone caulk. The wood block and the silicone caulk
  30. both worked pretty well.
  31. - You can dye beeswax, but you have to keep in mind that the stuff is already
  32. pretty yellow and opaque. Shades of green work well. Other colors... Well,
  33. I wound up with some the color of a strange weird woodland fungus.
  34. - Last time I did this, I wound up with a bunch of pillars that burned really
  35. poorly and with a small flame. I think I wasn't using a heavy enough wick.
  36. Tried to go with heavier braided wicking this time. Guess I'll see how that
  37. pans out.