The Biggest Mistake Beginners Make Sizing Candle Wicks

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  • čas přidán 22. 07. 2020
  • How long does it REALLY take to reach a full melt pool?
    Beginners hear the advice about sizing their wicks to create a full melt pool in a certain period of time... "x" amount of hours for every X inches of container diameter (a 3" diameter container should reach a full melt pool in 3 hours, for example). THIS ADVICE IS MISLEADING!
    Watch to learn a different perspective on wick sizing and what the candle industry expects when you size a candle wick!
    #candlemaking #candlehacks #meltpool
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Komentáře • 100

  • @marychen1281
    @marychen1281 Před 3 lety +42

    i do strongly agree with you on this one. Im still in this never ending testing phase of my small candle business journey.So half of my time is spent on ( if not testing and waiting for my candles to cure ) watching tutorials, reading forums, gathering all the stuff I need here and there..and I kid you not when I probably stumble 3 or 5 different informations from different candle maker all over the web. ONe of that which is , to triple wick a 3" diameter container i guess for instant compete meltpool gratification. and im here sitting, ..hello, safety anyone??
    I would say, your videos is probably the only one that SCIENTIFICALLY EXPLAINS all the aspect of candle making. Thank you so much for helping out begginers like me.

    • @ArmatageCandleCompany
      @ArmatageCandleCompany  Před 3 lety +1

      You're certainly welcome! There's a lot of data out there for sure. Glad you enjoyed this!

    • @creed3237
      @creed3237 Před 2 lety

      I agree wholeheartedly with you on this good luck

    • @andreahaug2368
      @andreahaug2368 Před rokem

      This is me aswell. It seems never ending. Some days I just want to switch to soap 😂

    • @teshaunanicole832
      @teshaunanicole832 Před rokem

      @@andreahaug2368funny you switch to soap because I’m a soap maker now looking to dive into candles. Going from soap to candles has me feeling like I’m back at square one all over again. Soap is very enjoyable tho, good luck if you do dive into soap making.

  • @yvonnebriscoe2446
    @yvonnebriscoe2446 Před 3 lety +22

    Best advice I've heard yet, far too many CZcams videos advocating a full melt pool on the first burn. This is not a safe candle. You would not be able to touch the jar/vessel by the time it burns down past the halfway point and run the risk of your jar/vessel cracking, shattering or exploding. By far this Chanel has the best advice on candle making and safety standards (which are not preached about enough) keep educating us all 👍 lovin' it 🥰

    • @desilu321
      @desilu321 Před 3 lety +5

      A lot of the the candle companies say that too and I’m now just learning that that isn’t the most important thing. In my experience a lot of what I’ve tested doesn’t get a full melt pull when I first burn them but after the second or third time it does. And those burn clean. No mushrooming or too much soot and the jars aren’t super hot. Lots of misleading info out there but at least we have people out there to learn from. I’ve been getting so discouraged over the stupid melt pool not happening within 2 hours but I feel better now. Lol.

  • @chocolatesugar4434
    @chocolatesugar4434 Před 3 lety +21

    The challenge is that a lot of customers expect a full melt pool on the first burn. I also prefer the slow burn and achieving a full melt pool toward the end of the burn. I thought i was alone on this lol hello friend 👋🏾🤣

    • @Valandreas
      @Valandreas Před 2 lety +1

      That's something I really needed to hear. I need more patience. lol

  • @rameym23
    @rameym23 Před 2 lety +5

    For testing, I have 4 candles that I start with. First candle is 1/4 of the way full, 1/2 way full, 3/4 and full. This way I can see how my candle burns at each of the stages and this way. Of my ones that are burning to hot or not hot enough. I have time to change out the wicks if need be. Food for thought but I have only been doing this for about a year so not a professional at this by any means.

  • @ravensimmons9564
    @ravensimmons9564 Před 3 lety

    I'm so happy I've found you before I start on my business, I'm learning so much ❤️

  • @sarazarei3597
    @sarazarei3597 Před 3 lety +8

    Thanks for this great video! Your videos are the only ones that actually explain how to create a safe candle

  • @jeaniewilliams-hill4040
    @jeaniewilliams-hill4040 Před 3 lety +4

    Such great info!! This makes so much sense! Thank you!

  • @edencreative_studio
    @edencreative_studio Před 2 lety +3

    Thank you for this! I have been trying to wick a certain vessel for 3 months and every time it gets down further in the jar it is super hot, the flame is out of control, and there is soot! I just had someone tell me what you just said 2 days ago. So I am testing a different wick that is leaving some tunneling for now. And I will wait until it does a complete burn to see if it cleans the walls at the bottom! This is soooo great! Thank you for sharing!

  • @grahamglenn
    @grahamglenn Před 3 lety +4

    This was really helpful. Especially going from hobby to selling. Thanks.

  • @victoriaboulay6952
    @victoriaboulay6952 Před 3 lety +2

    I always find your videos SO informative. THANK YOU. What you said, is exactly what I needed to know right now! Appreciate it :)

  • @rinitashadangi6789
    @rinitashadangi6789 Před 4 lety +4

    Thanks to you, i have learnt so much things in candle making, while making my own candle.😊👍

  • @manukaleafstudio
    @manukaleafstudio Před 3 lety +2

    I'm so glad I've found your channel!

  • @Valandreas
    @Valandreas Před 2 lety +3

    Thank you, I really needed this advice. I was hoping the first burn would achieve full melt pool at at the 3 hour (3" diameter) mark it was just shy of the sides fully melting, almost had a marshmallow/iceberg sort of look around the edge of the tin. I will definitely do a full top to bottom test now.

  • @CandleRomance
    @CandleRomance Před 3 lety +10

    I'm so glad I found this channel! I'm a beginner in this business and also have a CZcams channel (My Candle Romance) and your videos are really helpful to everyone who wants to begin making candles. Thanks

    • @ArmatageCandleCompany
      @ArmatageCandleCompany  Před 3 lety +1

      Thank you so much! I love watching your channel too - you have an awesome personality and a great take on things!

    • @arandomsincerity3057
      @arandomsincerity3057 Před 3 lety +2

      i watch your videos! I love your personality! thank you to you both

    • @CandleRomance
      @CandleRomance Před 3 lety +1

      @@arandomsincerity3057 Thank you so much!

  • @andreahaug2368
    @andreahaug2368 Před rokem

    Thank you for this invaluable advice. I agree with leaving a wax margin early on, as this melts down , usually, towards the end. It's good to hear a professional validating this. Thanks. From Ireland.

  • @joec2442
    @joec2442 Před 3 lety +1

    Always great advice, and it’s free!!

  • @lisasingh4133
    @lisasingh4133 Před 2 lety

    Very knowledgeable advice. Thank you for your videos! I’ve watched 4 of your videos so far and they have been so helpful.

  • @maxinehyndman1505
    @maxinehyndman1505 Před 2 lety

    As always, great advice, Kevin! Two thumbs up!!! Totally agree.

  • @lifewithamberb
    @lifewithamberb Před 2 lety

    This was so so helpful thank you!

  • @binauralharmonies3010
    @binauralharmonies3010 Před 3 lety

    Thanks.
    This makes so much sense 😊.

  • @chrivedy
    @chrivedy Před 2 lety

    Thanks for the helpful information! Today is the first time your videos have appeared in my algorithm.

  • @livkatrinzimny
    @livkatrinzimny Před 2 lety

    Love your videos. Very good information!!

  • @jrccandleco7939
    @jrccandleco7939 Před 2 lety

    Great advice!!!!!!!! So helpful!

  • @raekwonmiller8231
    @raekwonmiller8231 Před 8 měsíci

    I was burn testing my three candles a few days ago for burn time when I noticed the melt pools. The candles all have an eco 16 wick and the fragrance oils were Velvet Vanilla, Almond Macaron, and Redwoods and Moss. The Almond Macaron and Redwoods and Moss candles each had a full melt pool half an inch deep but the Velvet Vanilla had a full melt pool an inch deep.

  • @gracenivyco
    @gracenivyco Před rokem

    Such a fantastic video.

  • @sosu9068
    @sosu9068 Před 3 lety +4

    I'm new to correctly burning candles...very helpful!

    • @ArmatageCandleCompany
      @ArmatageCandleCompany  Před 3 lety

      I'm so glad it helps! Share the word if you're in any groups! I believe strongly that we need our community to focus on safety.

  • @popitargentina
    @popitargentina Před 3 lety +5

    You deserve much more followers!

    • @ArmatageCandleCompany
      @ArmatageCandleCompany  Před 3 lety +1

      Ah thanks!

    • @popitargentina
      @popitargentina Před 3 lety +2

      @@ArmatageCandleCompany thanks you are doing really a good job; I’m from Argentina and I’m in the candle making business, but I only do refills wich technically is challenging, you can’t test as you would do with regular products and vessels do change a lot. Also we have much more limited options regarding wicks so I’m always trying to know more, learn more etc. So I find your channel really informative. Keep working with this great videos!

    • @ArmatageCandleCompany
      @ArmatageCandleCompany  Před 3 lety

      Sounds like a big challenge! I believe in you. Keep up the great work.

  • @user-bc4rn1jw7e
    @user-bc4rn1jw7e Před 2 lety +2

    what should a melt pool look like for pillar candles?

  • @susanhill7885
    @susanhill7885 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you so very much for your video. It is so informative and educational. I’m having issues lately unlike before for some reason. Currently testing new 10 new fragrances using 8% FO in Kerasy 4130 wax. Using 77mm diameter jar with HTP 126 wicks. These wicks I’ve been using for a long time in my collection. These new candles now leave lot of wax on one side of the jar and the other side is totally clean, no wax. What could be the cause for this? I’d appreciate any advice on this issue. Thank you.😁🙏

  • @rokyochan
    @rokyochan Před 3 lety

    I've learned new things, thank u so much :)

    • @ArmatageCandleCompany
      @ArmatageCandleCompany  Před 3 lety +1

      It's my pleasure!

    • @rokyochan
      @rokyochan Před 3 lety

      @@ArmatageCandleCompany Btw, I have one doubt. Could you help me? I make candles in little crystal containers (45x45 mm) and I use tealight wicks cause this is the littlest ones I can find. The surface is melted within half an hour, with a melt pool of 5mm. I think I shouldn't sell this kind of candles because I dont think people like to light them for only half and hour o 1 hour. Besides, the glass reaches a high temperature within that little time. Don't know what to do...

    • @ArmatageCandleCompany
      @ArmatageCandleCompany  Před 3 lety +1

      My opinion - let your customers be the ones that tell you no. I'd try to sell them and let the market tell you it's not a good idea. If you never try, you'll never know! Tealight-sized candles have a market too, I think you'd be surprised.

    • @rokyochan
      @rokyochan Před 3 lety

      @@ArmatageCandleCompany Good morning (or night), Kevin! Thank u so much! As always, you are a great help. I think you're right. I hadn't seen it that way, letting the costumer to try the product. I must to go on and see what happen. Thank u again and have a great day!

  • @conniecarroll9398
    @conniecarroll9398 Před 3 lety +2

    I am sooo glad I found your channel. Thank you so much, oh I found you through Memory Box Candle. I will be taking your little course next weekend when I am off of work. See my son and I want to start a business, we have done 2 starter kits. We just put an order through Esty for supplies, oh my this is sooo much fun. Thanks when you do your test runs, do you use the same size vessel which you plan on selling in your business? Thanks

  • @chrivedy
    @chrivedy Před 2 lety

    Subscribed☝️

  • @katherinescavo8586
    @katherinescavo8586 Před 2 lety

    So informative! I always learn so much from your videos! Question for you- should I still expect my melt pool to burn 1 inch every hour when I’m testing halfway down the jar? I have heard that at the halfway point, the time to reach a full melt pool should be cut in half, since the candle is burning hotter than at the top, but I don’t want to follow the wrong advice. Really appreciate your guidance 🙏🏼

    • @malena7362
      @malena7362 Před 2 lety

      I’m starting at the halfway point to , did you figure anything out?

  • @slimgawd
    @slimgawd Před 3 lety

    What about a double wicked candle? I’m using a 3.375 inch diameter jar with two cd4 wicks. No soot, no smoking, but it reaches a full melt pool in an hour. But the jar doesn’t get too hot at all. Feels similar to a coffee cup.

  • @krutikrishnan890
    @krutikrishnan890 Před 3 lety +3

    This is interesting.. would you be able to show us some examples of what’s ideal and what’s not. I notice that when I use htp 73 on my 9 oz straight sided jar I notice I never get a full melt pool. But I get an excellent hot throw, good flame size, my jars never get over heated, no sooting. I still haven’t melted through the full jar. But if it does clean up the jar by the end your saying it’s a good one?

    • @ArmatageCandleCompany
      @ArmatageCandleCompany  Před 3 lety +4

      The first and most important thing about candle success is SAFETY. What you describe about your HTP 73 sounds safe. And the fact that you're cleaning up all the wax on the way indicates you have a winner. Keep going to the bottom/end of the candle to see if you're still maintaining a reasonable temperature control, but otherwise YES - that is a good candle.

  • @heroinegr3y
    @heroinegr3y Před 2 lety

    Is it normal for melt pool time to decrease down the vessel/jar?

  • @annmarielazarski5544
    @annmarielazarski5544 Před 5 měsíci

    Any chance you could do a video on vessels that are exactly the same diameter but are different materials!? I'm new to candle making and I'm actually a bit surprised to not see a lot of discussion about this. I have a vessel that is thick walled ceramic and a tin that is another option. They hold same amount of wax and inner diameter are exactly the same... However the ceramic vessel leaves a ring around the edges for first few 4 hr. burns, and then "catches up" and the tin ones reach a full melt pool in like 2 hours with the same exact wick!
    I'm really curious why it's not standard knowledge almost to "wick down" for aluminum containers

  • @powerinnaturealinaf.muntea8878

    Dear Kevin, here's the problem i have with my customers: they won't burn their candles for more than an hour, the candle card says to but they don't. most times people are in a hurry and they will light it for 40 mins or an hour, maybe an hour and a half and so they don't reach a full melt pool so if i as a candle maker reach my melt pool after about two hours but my clients burn for 45 mins to an hour or a little over an hour (let's say), then tunneling will inevitable happen which is why i wicked up however for a 4h test burn that burned too hot. so how does one settle this? THANK YOU!

    • @enriqueperezespinoza5415
      @enriqueperezespinoza5415 Před rokem

      This is a great one. Hope he answer soon

    • @sxmhandcrafted
      @sxmhandcrafted Před rokem +1

      You can test as your average customer. First, educate your customers. Have a video explaining how your candles burn and what they can expect. When you test, if you know that they're going to burn for an hour, then do your testing in hour increments. Sure it's tedious but you'll have a realistic picture of how it will perform for your average customer. So for me, I do the 4hour burn each time to select which wick works for me (I'm not a fan of wickless testing). Once I have the wick I like, I make 2 candles with that wick and then try different scenarios: burn for 14 hours straight (in case someone falls asleep) and in short bursts. Then you know what you can expect. I've found that some of my candles tunnel but they catch up perfectly fine once they reach the midway point in the container. Hope this helps!

  • @emerillester7641
    @emerillester7641 Před 3 lety +1

    I wanted to know why my fire is going dem in the candle?

  • @younggirlmari
    @younggirlmari Před 3 lety +1

    I loved your video! Are you familiar with the square and the status jar from the dollar tree. If so what wick do you recommend for them?

    • @ArmatageCandleCompany
      @ArmatageCandleCompany  Před 3 lety +1

      Ahhh no, I'm not! However, wick selection typically revolves around two things: wax type and diameter. Then it's just a matter of testing it to see if it works.

  • @pinaryavas1719
    @pinaryavas1719 Před 10 měsíci

    Uhm ... i need Help! Do i need any additives to prevent frosting in my soy/ coconut blend?

  • @ProudEve1
    @ProudEve1 Před 3 lety +5

    There is so much conflicting info out there.. but this makes sense. Thanks.

  • @beyoutifullyunique03
    @beyoutifullyunique03 Před 3 lety +3

    Hi , what are the standards for reaching a full melt pool for double wicking compared to a single wick?
    I have single wicking down, but now I’m testing double wicks and it reached a full melt pool the first burn by 1 hour for a 3 inch diameter jar. I know two wicks burn faster than one and I want to double wick but just want to make sure it’s not burning too fast. Thanks.

    • @sxmhandcrafted
      @sxmhandcrafted Před rokem

      The standards are the same no matter the number of wicks. Safety is safety. There are not any allowances for multiple wicks. If that is your question.

  • @heatherdoodles5504
    @heatherdoodles5504 Před měsícem

    The dontcha know made me giggle.

  • @stevenstubbings5349
    @stevenstubbings5349 Před 3 lety +1

    Where and how would I check the container temp, how do I find out what the container can take and what it should be ?

    • @ArmatageCandleCompany
      @ArmatageCandleCompany  Před 3 lety +3

      Hi, Steven - I use an infrared thermometer to measure the sides of my container. Highly highly highly recommend. What can the container take? Generally speaking, we don't want the container sides to exceed about 140°-150°F (per ASTM 2417), but the container can probably take a much higher thermal load than that. Problem is, we just don't want to make candles that behave that way for a variety of reasons. Just talk to Kohls about their recall this year lol.

    • @leesaunders4325
      @leesaunders4325 Před 3 lety

      Do you just shine the IR thermometer at the outside of the glass? I’ve been trying this (clear glass) but the temps seem to vary wildly and some read lower than others, while they feel hotter to touch :(

  • @mizzstarr510
    @mizzstarr510 Před 3 lety +3

    Wow this is so helpful... I always thought that if it doesn’t have a full melt pool then it’s the wrong size. But watching this makes so much more sense.
    My other wicks would be in such a big melt pool after like 2 1/2 hours. Way too hot!
    Thank you for this information. I’ll definitely stop worrying about my new wicks not touching the sides completely and focus on it being safe.
    Do you have a specific fragrance oil percentage that you like?

    • @ArmatageCandleCompany
      @ArmatageCandleCompany  Před 3 lety

      Awesome! Glad it made sense. I typically start with 7% or 8% in most designs if I have nothing else to go off of. Enjoy!

  • @sarazarei3597
    @sarazarei3597 Před 3 lety +3

    It's been a while I've been making candles and testing them. I realized that they reach a full meltpool in 3 hours (I've seen candles that reach a full meltpool in 1 hour) regardless, the jar gets really hot when the candle is near the end. I can't risk getting a bigger wick because the jar would be too hot, but I cand go down wick size because the won't be a full meltpool. I don't know what to do really :(

    • @ArmatageCandleCompany
      @ArmatageCandleCompany  Před 3 lety +5

      The ultimate judge of your candle is the safety test, not the melt pool. As long as your candle is safe, and performs the way you want, the melt pool really doesn't matter (though it tends to behave pretty good when you're winning in both of those categories).

    • @sarazarei3597
      @sarazarei3597 Před 3 lety

      @@ArmatageCandleCompany thanks!❤️

  • @estherdeer
    @estherdeer Před 3 lety +3

    Hi Kevin, I'm having trouble with one of my fragrances. Its top notes are being burned off. Should I reduce the percentage of fragrance oil or wick down? The problem is, this wick already barely reaches the edges of the glass (leaves 1mm around the sides) with that % of oil. Thanks in advance!

    • @ArmatageCandleCompany
      @ArmatageCandleCompany  Před 3 lety +2

      I'd for sure start with wicking down. That 1mm ledge might just take care of itself in later burns :)

    • @CENCEYOU
      @CENCEYOU Před 3 lety

      é simples, é preciso um pavio mais grosso

  • @lel7940
    @lel7940 Před 9 měsíci

    Do you think it's a good idea to add " Our candles are designed to reach full melt pool by the second or third burn" to listing descriptions? It's annoying that customers expect a full melt pool by first burn even though this usually means it's an over wicked candle.

  • @NeptunesGlory
    @NeptunesGlory Před 2 lety

    Problem is, designer candles like diptique are designed to reach a full melt pool on the first burn. So customers use this as a standard. Customers find it satisfying when a candle has a 'pretty' burn rather than a messy one with a slight wall and reaching a full melt pool at the end of the burn.

  • @alikemalcetinkaya8994
    @alikemalcetinkaya8994 Před 3 lety +1

    Hey bro! I have a question. I test soy wax with 3 wicks. Wicks choking itself and I don't think they are too short. What can I do for this problem?

    • @ArmatageCandleCompany
      @ArmatageCandleCompany  Před 3 lety +2

      If "choking" means that it's self extinguishing I'd assume they are too small of a size. For instance, if you're using 3 ECO 2 wicks, you'd want to try with 3 ECO 4 wicks and test. Heavily recommend you replace the wicks in the candle so you don't have to wait or re-pour!

    • @alikemalcetinkaya8994
      @alikemalcetinkaya8994 Před 3 lety +1

      @@ArmatageCandleCompany thanks a lot! I thought maybe thinner wicks could be more esthetic. Now I felt that I made body shaming to wicks

  • @lehcar19991
    @lehcar19991 Před 3 lety +2

    So when I light my candle, let it burn 4 hours straight while I attend to it

    • @ArmatageCandleCompany
      @ArmatageCandleCompany  Před 3 lety +3

      In the industry standard test for container candles, you burn it 4 hours at a time. Check it once per hour, and record the flame height at least once every 4 hours. There's other stuff too, but that's the heart of it, yeah!

  • @rhiannonneubet4768
    @rhiannonneubet4768 Před 3 lety

    Hi I'm making candles scared that I don't know where to start got soy wax I started kit

    • @ArmatageCandleCompany
      @ArmatageCandleCompany  Před 3 lety

      Make the kit and see how it goes! I wouldn't stress too much about the first few, just get a few rounds of candle making under your belt to see how you like it!

  • @wascalywabbit
    @wascalywabbit Před 3 lety +1

    Ok.. Burn time is important.. But I'm a freak i guess.. I want to make a 14 wick candle in either a large stock pot or crock to achieve a off the top equivalent to 5000 btu going by roughly 352btu that a individual flame makes.. How large can i go and what would be the best wick arrangement? If its 7.. I'll make 2

  • @eric-u
    @eric-u Před 3 lety

    Awesome video. So many disinformation out there causing safety issues!

  • @markritchiejr4068
    @markritchiejr4068 Před 6 měsíci

    No talk much how show video wicks melt fell down issue