Easiest Candle Making Technique Ever!
Posted by 💀MV on AUGUST 27, 2011
I love, love, love making candles! It’s one of the funnest and easiest crafts that I know of. I mean, how can you go wrong? Just melt a bit of candle wax, position your wick, add whatever colors or scents you like (crayons and essential oils or even perfume will work just fine), pour the whole thing together, and wait ’til it’s firm. I’ve been making my own candles since the 1990s and just love the entire process. It makes me feel so creative and clever to use up my leftover waxes this way! I also get the added satisfaction of knowing that my candle is unique; no one has quite the same color or scent that I do!
That said, pouring candles can be a real pain in the ass if you don’t get it right. The wax can form ugly lumps and bumps, you can find bubbles inside that compromise the burning smoothness, and sometimes the best-laid shapes will go awry. And long, skinny candles — well, forget pouring those! Dipping takes too long (though admittedly, I have not tried it very thoroughly: maybe I’ll do it sometime).
If you’re a first-timer or you’re in the market for an easy candle project, you can buy yourself some rolls of beeswax at your local craft store. They also come in candle-making kits that couldn’t be simpler. Place your wick on one side of the wax sheet, roll it up, and Bob’s your uncle. It’s lovely and takes only a few minutes.
In the same spirit as the roll-your-own-beeswax candle, I have created a terribly easy candle recipe that would make any star of the most recent episode of “Hoarders” stand and applaud vigorously. 😉
INGREDIENTS:
* Something for a wick (natural fiber string, rope, kitchen string, or buy yourself some commercial wick from the craft store.)
* One bag of your favorite wax-covered Laughing Cow cheese. (Bonbel and Babybel Light use red wax, and their Cheddar variety is coated in yellow wax.)
These candles are romantic and decadent,
not at all cheesy! Available in classic Babybel, or Cheddar.
Step 1. Eat the cheese as you normally would, storing up all of the awesome wax! Resist the urge to play with the wax… it’s hard, but you need to restrain yourself. Pick the wax apart so that it’s in half-circles or anything flat.
Step 2. [If you’re very about germs: wash the wax in cold, slightly soapy water. Soak for a bit, rinse, then allow to air dry undisturbed over the course of a few days. If you don’t care about getting cheese particles in your candle — and trust me, it’s not all that much anyway — read on…]
Step 3. Cut your wax into strips and wind it around your wick. After you’ve made a nice long, tall strip, wind more wax strips around your first coat. (It is this step where you can rub a bit of scented oil over your wax strips if you like — I did roses on mine, and now they smell like roses dipped in cheese.)
Step 4. Repeat until all of your wax is gone, or your candle is sized and shaped the way you want it.
Step 5. Put in a candleholder (or a glass filled with pretty stones, as shown) and light, enjoying the dark romantic ambience of your super-easy craft!