How To Avoid Surface Cracks - Candle Making
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- čas přidán 5. 02. 2021
- What can we do about those pesky surface cracks, craters, and air pockets on our candles?
This video is one of many lessons included in the Soy Wax Candle Making Fundamentals Course. Read more about that here: armatagecandlecompany.com/course
In this episode we’ll break down the primary reason these imperfections appear on our candles, what their impact is on the burn, and what you can do about it to improve your process.
Visit our website for a more in-depth view of this discussion.
armatagecandlecompany.com/
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Armatage Candle Company: Started in 2020 by Kevin Fischer to accelerate your candle making technique and business online.
To reach us send an email to hello@armatagecandlecompany.com or send us a direct message on social media.
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Do you like this format? Show me with a thumbs up and it'll tell me you want more videos like this!
love it! I'm highly visual, so this helps me retain the info. You're a great teacher as well, which makes all the difference. Thank you!
Writing is too small
I agree. i prefer if people don't point out the obvious just say what needs to be said.@@anyalouise1646
I feel like I'm back in school, watching Kahn Academy 😂 very straightforward video, I am a big fan of the visual aid
You got me! Huge fan of Khan Academy myself! Glad you liked it.
The delivery of this video is above everything else out there. Thank you for sharing something more professional. Rather than a common tutorial of people in their weird kitchens, it actually feels like a Bio Class. WORTH THE WATCH.
Glad it was helpful!
Khandle Academy
I love how you explain it in ur visuals in deep details.
Excellent! You've been a heap of help!
This couldn't have come at a better time! Thank you!
I so needed it. I was trying to to the wickless candles, I saw a bump kind of thing. Like the wax was going down from the middle. Also, I saw a crack in the same thing. Thanks for the video and explaining the reason behind it!!♥️
wow i have watched almost every candle video on youtube and yours was the only one that explained this. ty ty ty you rock. i am so happy i found this video. im about to start a candle, soap, lip balm etc business and starting after christmas. i appreciate your wisdom i will put this video on my start up page on my computer to reveiw. ty again
thank you, i like how you explain stuff. so easy to understand
I had similar issue. When I have deep container that happen, the crack part. When I had the shallow container, it was smooth no issue. With my deep container, I have warmer that designed for candle warmer, it smell great. When it cool, still have crack. So, I gave up on heating the gun since I am always gonna get crack when it cool. I pour at 165 ish. Room temp from 75 to 80 degree with the humidity on average 45%. I lived in south Florida. I need to keep my eye on this.
Update: so I tried again with wick but this time I poured at around 150ish and it came Smooth top. Rm temp 78, humidity 51%. I was so happy! Oh yes I used a rack and cover. I think that what help. Hope this tip help. The issue I had before was wickless candle. So the wickless part will have crack. But my wick might not because it won’t melt all of it.
Thank you so much
I like the visuals 👍
I keep my home at 22 degrees C when I make candles but still get cracks and air pockets. I heat wax to 185 and add FO and pour at 165
Thaks for the video!! Isn't warming up a the container another good option?
Wow thanks
History was made today because this is the first presentation I havent slept through
🤣👊
Can I poke holes and use the heat gun, if I made the candles 3 weeks ago?
Should we heat the jar before pouring wax to avoid jar separation?
Hello!! Can this be applicable to all types of wax?
Youre so awesome
Thanks for this video! I've been having issues when using the heat gun. If the top is quite uneven and i have to melt more than just a thin layer of wax, the candle ends up having a puddle of oil after a couple of days. It doesn't happen every time but more often than not. Any ideas what may I be doing wrong? :/
The puddles usually happen to me when I've overloaded my wax. Heat gunning the top may be damaging the wax capacity enough that it can't "recapture" the oil it was able to hold from good stirring at the higher temperature. Not really sure without seeing it, unfortunately!
@@ArmatageCandleCompany I generally use 7% to 9% with 464 so it shouldn't be a matter of too much FO. My current guess is that I may be holding the heat gun too close to the candle, which is close to what you mentioned about messing the capacity of the wax to recapture the oil 🤔. I didn't have this issue the first few times I used a heat gun, though, and I don't think I've changed my method. The wax also sets weird, a bit like if it had sand on top, instead of smooth.
not a candle maker myself , but would have thought that insulating the jar and a polystyrene board placed on the rim would slow the cooling and setting enough to prevent these problems
Differential cooling sometimes does strange things.
What temperature should you pour the melted wax into the vessel to prevent surface cracks
Ideally close to the temp of the melted wax. Doesn’t have to be extreme, but higher is helpful.
to the air to the cool to the container skeet skeet
Taking too much time in telling the problem than giving the solution