If you don't want your candles to catch fire, don't set them where they'll be directly exposed to sunshine or powerful interior lighting, such as a torch. If candles are revealed to strong sunlight, they will dim for an extended period.
Allow the candle to light to the outside edge on the initial ignition; if the wax is not permitted to melt from tip to base, a hole will appear in the center of the candle. If this isn't done, the wick will start tunneling and burning that way throughout the Christening candles. Allow the whole top layer of your Natural wax candles to become an aromatic lake of liquid wax whenever you shoot it, and you'll obtain the most perfect scent imaginable.
Keep the wick cut to around one inch at all times. If the flame is too high, trim the thread; if the love is too low, pour the wax off. To avoid damaging the flame, keep the resins out of the wick. It is difficult to light luxury candles for more than 3 hours; it is recommended that the candle be snuffed, cool for 2 hours, and trimmed before carburizing. It employs a Natural candle snuffer to avoid wicks from running off-center and failing to extinguish the soft wax without harming the thread.
Air bubbles can be found between the edges of the glass container and the wax in your soy candles. Soy wax is more sensitive to temperature fluctuations than other waxes, and it tends to curl, resulting in air bubbles. It is not an error, and it does not affect the candle's flame.
A candlewick pattern is a formation at the tip of a small carbon ball. This generates a small amount of heat, causing the flame's outer edge to melt. Because the candle was reused, the ball will be separated as well. It's usually simpler to cut the wick after you've fired the candle while it's still dry, removing waste wick deposits from the liquid wax.