I'm sure you have guessed by now, that I am all about soy wax or what a soy bean can do for you. Kudos to the soy bean farmers. Just to think, it was a plant grown for feed. Now used for cooking oils, cosmetics, to bio-fuels. The book or movie "The Help", they made references to Crisco, the cure all to everything, to fry chicken, to a moisturizer for your skin.
What is Crisco? Hydrogenated oil from a soy bean. OK, I got side tracked. I should be writing about the trials and errors of wicking candles. All the advice I got was to test wick first. What kind of wick? Do I use paper or cotton? I a course looked up what's the difference between the two and went from there. I chosen paper, it burns hotter and gives a better wax melt. Different size jars, calls for different size wicks. Pick the size wick that best matches the candle jar size and start from there. I always started with the bigger wick size and worked my way down. To much wick is not good, as is to little. One melts fast and the other not enough. When you find the right wick, test burn more then once. Sometimes they don't burn the same way twice. There are a lot of reasons way, but by checking to make sure the wick is centered is usually the first one. That one is not as simple as it's sounds when you make by hand.
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Sunday, September 30, 2012
Thursday, September 13, 2012
Beginning III Fragrances
When it came to fragrances for my
candles I was cautious. After my first experience turn out bad,
essential oils was the way to go. The candle aroma was
wonderful...actually awesome, but the scent throw is limited. I guess
the best way to describe is a box of roses. When you open the box, you
smell the roses right away. Then when you put them in a container or
jar and place them on a table in a room, they don't smell as strong.
Most candle lovers want a scent throw, to do the whole room. Essential
oils really don't do that they are an aroma, like the roses in the box.
They are cold pressed or a heated method is used from the natural
plants but not all plants you can extract from. Scents are a little
trickier, I guess that's why they have trade secrets on them.
Synthetic and oils from the natural plants were produced to get as
close to the naturally scent, some good and some not so good. This is
where things get a little confusing. Like I said "trade secrets" you
don't know what's in them, some are harmful and some not, if at all.
Saying that, I have to rely on organizations that watch over or over
see. The RIFM ( research institute for fragrance materials) they have
guidelines and I like to say that, the fragrance industry follows but I
don't know that for sure. With that being said, where do you get
fragrances? Ask, do they follow the RIFM guidelines or the place where
they get their fragrances oils made. I feel if they do, then you and I
are a little step closer to a safer synthetic fragrance oil. Which will
help in making better candles.
Monday, September 3, 2012
The Beginning II
It seems
like I spent a life time on the Internet
looking for 100% soy wax. So many choices, but I never really found one stating 100% soy wax. I then looked into soy
beans. You have cooking oil (soy bean), shortening "Crisco"
(soybean), so how do you make soy wax. No, I'm not going to bore
you with all those details. I read them.....that was enough.
Finally, I found a company that sold soy oil, shortening
& wax. Their products are used in the bakery industry. I like
bakeries, no problem there. Now, I could only imagine how long it's
going to take for fragrance oils. There are commercial grade or cosmetic,
let the journey begin.
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