We make and sell bayberry candles with a 50/50 beeswax blend on our farm in Massachusetts. They have a light green color and a BEAUTIFUL nostalgic aroma from the bayberry. Same methods. Once you get the technique down it's a nice, relaxing thing to do on a Sunday.
@stephanief767915 күн бұрын
Hello @TheHonestPeanut. Do you sell online? I would love to try one of your bayberry candles.
@catherinewhite294314 күн бұрын
Ditto.
@tessat33814 күн бұрын
How much wax can you get from bay berries? I've often wondered.
@DM-kl4em14 күн бұрын
I second the request for an online store location. Christmas is around the corner, and my wife loves candles. It's a great gift idea for all the husbands out there, because no woman can EVER have too many candles.
@LadywatchingByrd14 күн бұрын
Yankee candle made me fall really hard in love with "bayberry". I hope that's a similar fragrance. 🥰I don't know what the actual natural fragrance of bayberry is like, but I'm assuming it's better
@noneofyourbusiness709414 күн бұрын
My grandmother would always collect leftover stubs of crayons and mix them together in a mold to make lovely colorful candles. She was excellent at recycling everything possible into new items for additional use.
@jordanwalsh169114 күн бұрын
Cool! A very modern version of people setting aside their tallow and other fats. Can you remember how the candles smelled? Crayons smell kind of funky so I always assumed candles would smell the same, but if they don't then that's definitely on my project list.
@harpintn14 күн бұрын
My mom would do the same thing.
@ConLustig13 күн бұрын
I’ve recycled candles I just set all my used up candle scraps in my car in summer-easy free heat
@jordanwalsh169113 күн бұрын
@@ConLustig Clever! Although if I ever tried that and it spilled I would feel quite the fool, haha.
@teeveepowers440013 күн бұрын
I have kids and so always have crayons on the floor, never thought of adding them to candles!
@TheChadPad13 күн бұрын
I have set myself up a little writing table in the dormer in my bedroom right next to the window, and recently I wrote an essay using the fine laid paper from your shop and a quill that I hand-carved using the instruction of your documentary on 18th Century handwriting from a turkey vulture feather, and I did this at night by candlelight. I have to say, this was one of the best experiences of my life. Thank you, Townsends. You are truly bringing back the 18th Century.
@davestelling10 күн бұрын
What a neat little exercise!
@TheChadPad10 күн бұрын
@@davestelling I'm blown away that 47 people liked it and that one of them was Townsends. I truly expected no one to see this. Thank you. Highly recommend. I want to be a writer, so this is important to me. Wish me luck!
@nessamillikan62479 күн бұрын
@@TheChadPad You won't need luck, you already are one. The more you write, the more of a writer you are. :)
@TheChadPad8 күн бұрын
@ Thank you :) That means the world to me. God bless you!
@RealBradMiller7 күн бұрын
My Dearest Chad, I trust this humble note finds thee in good health and high spirits. I have taken but a moment, in the cold of this eve, to scribble my thoughts upon this parchment for thine amusement, as I find great solace in the world of moving images you have shared. In truth, my fingers grow numb with the wind howling through the cracks of the windows, alas! It seems my time has been cut short. I must now cease, for a most unnatural chill has seized my han-
@paulrward14 күн бұрын
For the working class people in the 17th, 18th, and 19th centuries, the candles were mostly tallow with just enough beeswax added to ' stiffen ' the candles and prevent them from sagging in hot weather. To conceal the smell of the tallow, a few drops of mint oil, rose oil, or lemon/orange oil were added to provide a much more pleasant aroma. If a person was short of beeswax, you could make the candles out of tallow, and then simply dip them in melted beeswax to provide a harder outer coating.
@lauriemclean113114 күн бұрын
Very interesting -- thanks for sharing that. I should have read more comments before posting my question about blending of candle materials.
@jerryodell116815 күн бұрын
During the 1940s and 1950s, candle making was a history class project in our local high school. Two reasons: 1.) To teach a history lesson. 2.) There were still shortages from WW2 and candles might be needed (some items were still rationed in some places until 1954) It was also taught how waxes and tallow could safely be obtained locally if needed.
@debbralehrman595715 күн бұрын
You are from England then?
@jerryodell116815 күн бұрын
@@debbralehrman5957 Canada, the USA, Australia, and others did the same thing. We were all in it, all supported each other, and shared the shortages. You must remember that the world was not only coming off war, we were also still trying to recover from the world-wide depression. There was an almost continuous string from WW1 to depression to WW2 that made it tough for everyone. Things were so bad in the USA during those times that it was rare to see cars on the roads, animals in the wild because they were hunted for food, and if there were cars in an area, all of the fresh road kill was picked up, examined, and cooked by someone.
@debbralehrman595714 күн бұрын
@@jerryodell1168 I just asked because it was only in recent years that I realized how much after WW2 Britain was still rationing. Which suprised me because I am usually aware of modern history. It was not my intent to be rude or disrespectful. Sorry if I offended.🙁
@SlapStyleAnims14 күн бұрын
We should have that in history classes today!
@CliveHateley7 күн бұрын
@@debbralehrman5957 We had to feed most of europe after the War as well as ourselves in Britain and that is why rationing lasted so long.
@agimagi215813 күн бұрын
I still remember when I was about 7 years old I was walking with my mum in the park when we spotted a bunch of people sitting around a giant barrel full of melted wax dipping candles. It was just around this time of year, end of november, early december probably, so it already started to get dark and cold and somehow the gentle light and the warmth radiating from the wax seemed so magical to me. They let you pick a wick and you could dip your own candles. They helped me of course as I was a small child. I still remember how slowly more and more people came to try their hands at candle making, children and adults alike, just there in the midst of a dark and cold park. I was so proud of the candle I made.
@sylviagibson463915 күн бұрын
My daughter made dipping candles in the 2nd grade. That was in the late 70s, I still have those candles.
@Louis-e6q8 күн бұрын
I used mine in the back yard IN my home made tint around 1972😂
@Donewitsleepyjoe15 күн бұрын
You make me love history even more than I do, been watching you for almost over five years and still amazes me thank you
@FlaviusTheGrumpyCat14 күн бұрын
My grandma was into historical reenactment, and taught me about historical candle making and toy making. Thank you for reminding me of her today ❤️
@MC-81015 күн бұрын
Sunday morning with Townsends. Best way to enjoy the morning cuppa. ☕️
@VespasianJudea15 күн бұрын
I prefer breakfast with the Beatles but this is a close second.
@CP-tm7be14 күн бұрын
After I made the happy discovery that any impurities sink to the very bottom (like leftover soot and whatever), I started saving and collecting used candle wax from my friends, especially if they had an event with lots of little candles. Just chuck it all in a pot, melt it all together (mine are mostly paraffin, with some beeswax for scent and color) and dip away. I used to sort of carve the soot out and only use the "pure" wax, but you just don't have to. It's very nice to have homemade candles, especially since they're so expensive to buy! Awesome episode!
@timkarlsson17506 күн бұрын
My mom foes this as well, she has several different molds so she has extra fun with it.
@entrepreneursfinest15 күн бұрын
I have some deer tallow/suet candles that I made last winter that give off no smell at all. You have to boil the rendered tallow in several changes of water though to get a clean product though. I have a couple of antique candle moulds - a 10 barrel and a 16 barrel - that I'm going to try out this year. Awesome video!
@essaboselin525215 күн бұрын
This immediately reminded me of "Farmer Boy" by Laura Ingalls Wilder. One of my favorite books in the series since it talked about how things were made.
@МаусГастон13 күн бұрын
A candle 🕯️. A light of Hope. That's what I need now in my life more that ever! For to survive this period of my life and this Winter.
@vargvikernes63668 күн бұрын
My favorite channel by far!
@stevenmiller775110 күн бұрын
We make about 1000 beeswax candles (almost) every year for Moravian church Christmas services in our area. We use custom made 10' taper molds similar to ones you have with 100% beeswax. We use a sponge under the bottom of the mold during pouring to stop the wax from getting out, and when we tie the wicks at the top, we use a wooden block sized to the molds which have 12 candles total. We typically use a heat gun to help loosen the candles a bit after they're solidified (but are still warm) to help get them loose. Using the wooden block on top as a handle allows us to pull all of the candles out at once, where they are then hung to cool off. After that we trim the ends and hand polish to give them a nice sheen.
@brianartillery15 күн бұрын
Absolutely fascinating, Jon. And oddly relaxing, too. I love Beeswax. Many years ago, I worked in one of my town's museums, which is a huge Elizabethan mansion, on the edge of a vast park, in the centre of town. It's displays are in rooms, each depicting a different era. On the rear of the mansion, there is a whole Tudor house, which was rescued from demolition, and moved, whole, to the site, and married seamlessly to the mansion - this was in the 1920's. The upstairs floor of this house had a floor of oak boards, which due to their undulating nature, had to be polished by hand - the rotary polisher would have just ripped them to bits. They were polished using a large block of beeswax and soft cloths. It took ages, but I loved doing it. For the rest of the day, one smelled pleasantly of beeswax, and the great payoff was seeing visitors - some of whom were astonished that it was done by hand - remark on the floor and the fragrant odour.
@aliasfakename315912 күн бұрын
I love the process of candlemaking. It reminds me of How It's Made
@richardprescott632214 күн бұрын
Get over to the UK, Blists Hill working museum in Telford, Shropshire. The candle makers are brilliant. Great fun for anyone as you have to change over modern money to Victorian money. Even for us Brits it can be confusing. And a pub.
@ellaisplotting14 күн бұрын
I went many times as a child and several times since then too! They have a proper rotating candle dipping apparatus you can watch in action, and on school trips you get to dip your own and take it home- I've still got my two to this day 😅. It always smells strongly in there, although not of meat or particularly animal-ly. You don't have to change over your money at the bank, although it is fun to do. And there's a great deal more there than just the pub (when I was going there on school trips the pub wasn't there yet, and I'm only in my 20s!).
@Melissa077414 күн бұрын
I want to see you do a video on books and book stores in the 1700's. You should talk about where the average person bought books back then, how many books people typically had in their house, and what kind of books they typically had. I'm curious about this because you cook recipes from so many old cookbooks from back then and it makes me wonder how common or uncommon it was for average people to have those cookbooks, or if only rich elites had them. How many people, especially women, even knew how to read back then and what were the schools and education like in the colonies?
@kimberlycockram189412 күн бұрын
As for the books, I can’t answer that but in my college history class, there were more literate women and poor people in the colonies than in England.
@Melissa077412 күн бұрын
@@kimberlycockram1894 I just wondered what kind of cookbooks the average person in the colonies were using and where they would've gotten them from, since John uses so many of those cookbooks for this channel. I wonder how realistic it is that a lot of people back then would've been using those books too.
@edwardlulofs4447 күн бұрын
@@Melissa0774cookbooks used repeated similar instructions with limited vocabulary, so I assume that many people could use them. Much of the writing from that time that we read has complicated syntax and wide vocabulary. There were snobs then just as now.
@macsarcule15 күн бұрын
Magnificent! I love seeing things filmed in the workshop! This was so fun! Thank you Townsends team! 🙂✨
@johnboleyjr.169815 күн бұрын
my teacher in 2nd grade, Mrs. Asher, taught us how to make dipped candles. She also taught us how to make butter from raw milk with an old school butter churn. They are lessons I remember, and often think about to this day. I'm not sure schools would allow kids, especially 2nd graders, to work with hot wax these days.
@kittyfox320015 күн бұрын
You’re one of my MOST favorite people to watch! I love history!
@patricialavery827014 күн бұрын
Something of a lost art was the paper milk carton candles my dad and I made when I was young. The mold was a cleaned milk carton. You poured liquid red or green dyed paraffin over cracked ice in the carton and the wick. Then set it. The candle came out with an amazing Swiss Cheese texture. Don't think those cartons are made anymore and I am guessing plastic is unsuitable.
@codename49514 күн бұрын
They are.
@hanelyp112 күн бұрын
I remember doing that. To do it today I suppose you'd have to also make a waxed cardboard box, or use a tapered reusable mold.
@paulschwartz246413 күн бұрын
I really enjoy learning all the skills that the vast majority of Americans have forgotten. Thank you for your content.
@clwest353814 күн бұрын
I wonder if the truly poor ever made candles in sand molds? In our art class we created designs in damp sand, attached wicks and poured the wax. It is not a true sand casting (the kind where the sand sticks to the candle), but was so much fun for all of us.
@annetterk13 күн бұрын
I remember making sand candles in Girl Scouts. We'd gather shells, twigs, acorns, pine cones, and a flat rock as the base to lay in the sand first, set the wicks, and then pour the wax. Mine was in the curio cabinet for years.
@olddawgdreaming571514 күн бұрын
That was great Jon, love the smell of the Bee's Wax Candles and there are several uses for the left over bee's wax around the shop for tool maintenance. Thanks for sharing with us, Fred.
@Montana_Ranch_Rescue15 күн бұрын
Been following for a decade +, and have made candles this exact way-it works 🙌🏻 Thanks for making your brilliant content. It has taught me so much. God Bless
@Token_Civilian15 күн бұрын
Another fantastic, wholesome video.
@rackets00111 күн бұрын
I remember making candles back in the mid 80's in grade school. We dipped, then walked back in line to do it all again. It was a great time.
@jeromethiel432314 күн бұрын
True story. I used to work at a steel mill, and one of the things you can do to reduce roll wear, is to oil the rolls rolling out the steel (reduces surface friction). The oil used is animal fat. So the entire mill smelled like rancid bacon grease. Smelled both tasty and disgusting at the same time. So i feel you on tallow candles. One side benefit of tallow candles, is you CAN eat them if you run out of food. Will taste revolting, but fat is fat when you are starving.
@oldchickenlady13 күн бұрын
I used to make tallow candles and they smelled like meat cooking when they burned, very pleasant smell. I have a tin, round shaped candle box with a hinged lid and small clasp closure to keep mice out of the candles hanging on the wall. At the end of the evening, all of the candles needed to be stored in the candle box . I believe I may have bought the candle box from you folks. I taught1840 life skills for many years and absolutely loved every minute of it!!!
@billmiller497212 күн бұрын
Great video! When I was a child we often poured candles. We used old coke bottles as molds (had to carefully break them), often using different colored wax. Fond memories.
@aaronakiyama14 күн бұрын
Many many years ago when I was a kid, I attended a history camp at Fort Nisqually in Washington. One of the activities we did was candle making using the dip method. This video was very nostalgic for me!
@WCD_Media15 күн бұрын
My great grandmother taught me how to make candles and soap from animal fats and oils.
@stormyeffects479514 күн бұрын
Every time I watch a video from this channel, I look for the subscribe button, only to find that I’ve already been subscribed for years. Great videos. Thank you so much for sharing all of this with us!
@AnnYoung-h5h14 күн бұрын
I did not realize how precious and expensive candles were then I watched Candleford on Masterpiece Theatre with Dame Judith Dench. The young new doctor needed to preform emergency surgery at night and the whole community donated candles which they really could not afford to give but did.
@The13thGhostBunny15 күн бұрын
Super interesting! I've always wondered how candles were made. I, for some strange reason, imagined it'd be much more complicated.
@VespasianJudea15 күн бұрын
The wick is more complicated than the candle itself.
@RolloTonéBrownTown14 күн бұрын
This is so darn satisfying to watch, especially seeing the girth of the taper expand. I bet you could add smelly oils to the wax itself, or perhaps dunk the candle in the wax, let it cool a moment, then dunk into the sweet oil to make a scent candle
@snoobab_86Күн бұрын
One of the finest KZbin channels! Thank you for another amazing production!
@meacadwell14 күн бұрын
I've made candles using both methods. The molds we used were hinged, made it much easier to remove the candles. It's been decades since I did it, I remember keeping the mold cold until the wax was poured in so the wax would immediately solidify and not leak out everywhere.
@mraaronhd14 күн бұрын
Hey John, could you guys do a video on 18th century toilets/plumbing? As a new father who is trying to potty train my child, I couldn’t help but wonder about how people did their business in the 18th century- whether be in towns or on the homestead. Thank you.
@townsends14 күн бұрын
You might enjoy this kzbin.infoKwZkJunAglw?feature=share
@winnerscreed676715 күн бұрын
Wonderful, thank you for revisiting this topic again Townsends. A candle and or firemaking video always warms my day.
@latinamexical44058 күн бұрын
I was a chandler at Greenfield Village and Henry Ford Museum back in the late 1970s and 80s. I made three kinds of candles there, Spermaceti (until it became illegal), beeswax and bayberry. I used molds of various sizes and I also dipped candles in large quantities. Concerning the molds, I never used clay to stop the ends from leaking out wax, I always tied a knot, and pulled the wick up firmly and tied it on the cross bar. Always worked very well and still does. One just must use the correct wick size for the mold and candle size. I still make candles, using antique molds and dipping.
@Barbarra6329711 күн бұрын
Good video. I've been making traditional and custom candles for 35 years, there is a lot to know if you want to have it as a hobby or a business. There are great books out there with valuable information so your candle making experience won't be disappointing.
@バナナお爺さん15 күн бұрын
I've been playing this game called kingdom come: deliverance that is set in the medieval times, I now love to watch this content! Big ups!
@Chickston15 күн бұрын
This is one of my favorite kind of videos, the kind that sends me looking up more on the topic. So checking the Wikipedia article on candles, and it says their modern era with the self trimming pleated and treated wick started 1825 with several patents. This exceeds the channels time range a bit, so I'm sorry, we are all going to have to use inferior candles for authenticity. Also, interesting to think that candles existed for so long without these relatively simple innovations. Makes me wonder what items we are going that with now.
@debbralehrman595715 күн бұрын
It was delightful to see the Nutmeg Tavern all aglow on Friday. Thanks for sharing your Expertise in this area. Thanks Jon and Crew. 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼🕯🕯🕯🍁🍂🍁🍂🍁🍂🦃
@MsLeenite12 күн бұрын
My family visited Colonial Williamsburg when I was a kid. I surprise myself sometimes with memories that come back to me, though it was 60 years ago. I remember the interesting smells of the Apothecary shop, and seeing how candles were made, bonnets were trimmed, and metals wrought. We didn't take the inside tour of the Governor's mansion, but we did walk around the gardens and lose ourselves in the maze.
@jacobh183314 күн бұрын
I love these 18th century videos on the technology or the chores of the day, like the laundry video and this one. Oh, and the video on letters!
@henrya353013 күн бұрын
Even if you are using a mould to make candles, you may still find it necessary to use the dip method if only to make tapers. A taper is a very thin candle used, in the absence of matches, to light other candles. Generally they are no thicker than modern birthday cake candles but much longer. Very useful if you want to light more than a couple of candles. Another useful piece of equipment is the candle extinguisher or candle snuffer. It consists of a small cone at the end of a handle. In this context it is a different instrument from a candle wick trimmer which can also be called a 'snuffer' but serves an entirely different purpose. The use of a snuffer helps to avoid problems associated with blowing hot wax and it avoids the smoke and odour of a smouldering wick which results from simply blowing a candle out. Extinguishers are still commonly used in homes and churches. Sometimes the handle of the snuffer can be three or four feet long and the cone has a holder for a taper. This is how you light and extinguish candles on a chandelier (or those tall candles found in some religious settings).
@420Fanatic14 күн бұрын
Yes! Thank you for making this video, I’ve been extremely interested in candles and have been making my own using rendered oil.
@dwaynewladyka57715 күн бұрын
What a very enlightening episode on making candles. Cheers!
@fishinwidow3513 күн бұрын
Love this episode. Candlemaking was popular in the 60s and 70s and we used just about anything for molds.
@SandraudigaVali14 күн бұрын
Back in elementary school it was a winter tradition to go make candles at a local place with the entire class. Good times
@killolot14 күн бұрын
This is awesome. Brings back memories of 5th grade field trip to a California Missionary. We walked in a circle taking turns dipping the string into hot wax.
@FrikInCasualMode15 күн бұрын
Very interesting video. It shows how time consuming candlemaking could be if you didn't have some tools to help. Also, tallow candles *were* popular - because they were much cheaper and easier to get than superior beeswax ones. Also also - there were candle clocks in use - basically candles of set size, that were marked on the side with notches indicating how many hours passed since candle was lit.
@jilliemc14 күн бұрын
And courtship candles!
@fawntheresa533815 күн бұрын
I really enjoy your videos, when I have time to watch them.
@Vikingwerk15 күн бұрын
I have half a memory of reading an account of candle making at home, and they tied some kind of small weight (lead maybe?) to the ends of the wicks, to keep them straight for the first few dips, then snipped them off once the wax had built up a little.
@victormartin66088 күн бұрын
I love candles 😊
@marleneplatcek636415 күн бұрын
Have some friends that did candle making @ the Rendezvous. Thanks for sharing
@jilliemc14 күн бұрын
Reminds me of the four seasons that Michigan's Heritage Park was open. We made candles in the settlers' cabin on a regular basis.
@gtbkts15 күн бұрын
Thanks for all the amazing videos and epic content!!
@tatalsaba14 күн бұрын
Interesting, always good to see how things used to be made in the past, I was expecially intrigued by the bit about the wicks having to be cut regularly. Got to say though, I'd like to see the channel make a tallow candle that most of the population would've used in those times, rather than the beeswax ones.
@sanabanana8313 күн бұрын
Very nice video. Candle making is an art all on its own.
@mikeskelly235614 күн бұрын
'Dip' candles go faster if you keep a pot of cold water nearby. After each wax dip, lowering them into the cold water firms them up faster and allows for a thicker coat with each dip in the wax. Using a 'Follower' or 'Candle Thimble' would ensure all the wax burned and didn't just drool down the side of your taper, shortening the life of the candle and making a hard to clean mess...
@hasufinheltain139014 күн бұрын
The development of the wick is surprisingly involved. You'd assume it was a solved issue for a long time, but wicks were still being improved on right up until the advent of the electric light. We'd probably still be improving on them now, if we kept using candles and oil lamps as our primary light source.
@Lianthrelle14 күн бұрын
7:05 I'm surprised you don't just use two longer wires running lengthwise to take up less room. Could also have simple notches on the rim for easy wire placement
@Scriptorsilentum8 күн бұрын
details, details... you've mentioned two sensible refinements for the moulds and also the technique. Thank you!
@andrewapurcell9 күн бұрын
Please dont ever die.
@mrmicro229 күн бұрын
Death comes for us all.
@cecilyerker8 күн бұрын
Jon Townsend is a healthy, active and prudent man with a beautiful family, and hopefully will be able to educate us for many years. ❤
@wolfebyte2 күн бұрын
I make tallow for soaps, and moisturizers. Cook down your beef fat and strain it well, using cheesecloth. If you add about 3 teaspoons of salt to your strained tallow and use an immersion blender to mix in a cup of water and put it in the fridge to separate, after a couple of times, the salt removes any cooked meat smell from your tallow. My tallow comes out pure white with no smell. I use 1/4 tallow or lard to 2/3 beeswax for a candle.
@rhysodunloe246310 күн бұрын
I work at a furnishing store and often have to replace broken candles that customers bring in. We throw them in the trash anyway, so my boss gave me permission to sometimes take home one or two where I recycle them into camping tea lights. Therefore I break them up further, remove the wick and cut it into smaller trims which I clamp into those wick holders from the bottoms of tea lights and whenever I empty another box of mints I put two or three of those wick trims into the bottom of the tin box and melt some wax into it. And when I go camping or on a picknick I have some pocket sized romantic candle light with me. 😅 But now I remember there's still several pounds of paraffin wax lying in my cupboard and I'm really thinking about buying or making a candle mold for some proper candle light dinner.
@dgracia1812 күн бұрын
Cooled off beeswax can be rubbed between your fingers and then use to plug those small holes the wicks come through instead of using clay. Cutting the candles on the other end then trimming off the squares is really not a big deal and it makes sure that all of the candle mold barrels actually fill up with the wax. When removing the candles, a simple thing to do if the candle is stuck, is use a hair dryer to blow medium hot air on the barrel of one; then pull it out and do the next one. As long as you don't heat it up too hot, they come out nice and smooth with very little effort.
@iissamiam13 күн бұрын
If you let the wax cool in the cup, to the point it just starts to form a skin, before you poor it into the mold, it will prevent the wax sticking to the mold, and the wax will usually shrink away from the mold instead of cupping the bottom of the candles.
@jinglebell6115 күн бұрын
My favorite part of the state fair - ladies dressed in colonial clothes dipping bayberry candles.
@camohawk67039 күн бұрын
I made candles using that type of mold on a field trip when i was in middle school. That was a fun field trip.
@a.scotth.99559 күн бұрын
Here in Williamsburg, Va they make bayberry candles. I love candle making, so interesting! This was a good video! Thank you.
@KeriNic4614 күн бұрын
I recently purchased the candle making kit from you. I’m excited to try it out.
@theresalee939212 күн бұрын
Thank you! I really enjoy burning a beeswax candle…the aroma and the glow!
@ChristopherKuhns11 күн бұрын
Tallow candle wax melted faster than beeswax and so required the use of scissor style wick trimmers. About every ten minutes or so wicks needed trimming to reduce black soot from floating in air and depositing on white table cloths etc. The scissor shape snuffers had 4 features: wick trimmer, flame snuffer, tip of blade forms wax rivulets for proper dripping and on some trimmers on finger holes to scrape wax drippings for remelting.
@youngtrout495013 күн бұрын
I made a candle when I was a kid on a field trip to a historical recreation site. I think I still have it somewhere. I remember it smelled really good.
@agimagi215813 күн бұрын
Such a beautifully done video, I love the atmosphere. I'm going to buy some wicks now
@ryelor12313 күн бұрын
Dry graphite spray might be a useful release agent. Looks like black spray paint when wet but it dries quickly and shouldn't dissolve in the wax. Also, candles used to be pretty expensive and a lot of people back then relied on rush lights which were a poor-man's candle. Though the plant might've been limited to the UK area.
@mrMacGoover7 күн бұрын
I worked at a candle factory and we made stick candles on a continuous drawing machine with big drum rollers at each end. The wick was drawn thought a wax bath and immediately through a graduated forming die... each revolution a bigger diameter until desired thickness was met.
@christopherdecker38304 күн бұрын
The second method reminds me of how Moravian Lovefeast candles are made in Old Salem. Place a little bowed wrapping on the bottom of the candle and you can hold it for a few minutes without getting dripped on, unlike a parrafin candle. Plus, the beeswax is recyclable 😀!
@SirFrederick14 күн бұрын
Thanks for reminding me to make more candles
@RichardT211212 күн бұрын
They also make a great Christmas gift!
@julietbowden618914 күн бұрын
Family Thanksgiving craft! Excited to try this.
@yobgodababua186214 күн бұрын
We used to stop by the side of the road to collect bayberries for candles when I was little. It takes a lot of bayberries...
@deborahcaldwell977514 күн бұрын
I loved this reminder
@JoeySommer-c4z12 күн бұрын
we used to have a second bucket with water to dip them in the water to cool them off quickly
@dianebondhus935514 күн бұрын
I love bees wax candles. Making them sounds like a fun family project! ❤
@Mrcaffinebean4 күн бұрын
Great video! I would love to see the front end of this process as well. The tallow making and wax making. That feels like the hard bit of the process.
@davidbandler13 күн бұрын
The reason why tin or brass molds were (and are) still preferred is because of thermal transfer; allowing that outer layer of wax to cool rapidly, reducing shrinkage but also causing easier release of the wax from the mold - thus no need for any mold release help like sprays. Sometimes the older ways and products are superior to newer things - its worth the time finding a brass/tin mold or manufacturing one (tin and brass tubes, sheet, and stock are readily available from manufacturers like K&S Precision Metals). Stainless steel is just the wrong material for the mold.
@shavanerad903811 күн бұрын
I made beeswax candles as a kid (I'm in my mid-60s) -- we had a friend who was a beekeeper. But today, I make candles from soy wax. Many modern hobby-chandlers will use paraffin, and I recommend against. Paraffin is bad for your lungs, and particularly in a shut in winter house, the ventilation is not going to be good enough to save your respiratory system. Both beeswax and soy wax are not perfect for low ventilation, but they aren't really bad for you. Also, a modern smokeless wick will save you from your fire alarms going off. Don't ask me how I know, lol...
@williamworth274611 күн бұрын
It's amazing what we take for granted
@Joshuadummitt14 күн бұрын
If you are in New England and at a reenactment, look up JD Chandler. I am a historical candle maker that goes to reenactments and several museums and talk about the history of candle making and lighting. Just wanted also to say, that you don’t need modeling clay, beeswax is quite pliable, and when you warm it into your hands, you can mold it like clay. That’s what I use as the stoppers for the bottom of the candle mold.
@AlRoderick14 күн бұрын
If anyone is having a problem understanding why the 19th century wick design is self trimming, a candle flame is hottest on the outside where the vaporized wax comes into contact with fresh oxygen, the inside of the flame is basically hollow, just hot wax vapor that's not burning. When the charred wick is standing straight up it's not hot enough to burn it to ash and there's not enough oxygen available and so it smokes and smolders. The woven wick curls off to the side as it burns, which allows it to reach the hottest part of the flame and the outside oxygen causing the leftover carbon, all that remains of the natural fibers, to burn away.
@O-sa-car15 күн бұрын
This reminds me of making these in the candler tent at the ancient Israel themed vacation bible school we had at my church growing up. It's an easy, fun, and useful activity.
@Kat_Nguyen13 күн бұрын
I enjoyed seeing how to make candles in the 18th century. I would love to try the dipping the wicks into the wax method to create candles.