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Crowded House

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Posts posted by Crowded House

  1. From their site:

    Our Seamless Tins are generally used for industrial purposes. They are not pristine tins and may have black marks and scratches from the manufacturing process. However, they work very well for party favors and other uses. PLEASE NOTE: if you order less than a case, the possibility of damage increases due to compromised packaging. Generally, this isn't a problem. However, for this reason we do not accept returns of UPS damaged product if the package contains less than a full case.

    I do like the way Candlescience packages their 2oz. tins. Everyone else I've ever ordered tins from has just put them in a plastic bag in a box.

    Never had damage problems either way though.

  2. I'm not much for leading people on, so I'd probably just point out that the insurance company she emailed me with wasn't the same as the one she told me she worked for at the show, and ask her if that would affect how much my rate was going to be.

    I'd expect not to hear from her after that, though.

  3. We are our own worse critics and yet if we were to take one of our candles and hold it up to a commercialized one. We don't really realize how good ours are? People will buy the Glades and the Yankee's because its in front of them. Its all name recognition.

    I agree. No one will buy your stuff if they don't know it exists.

    Being a smaller candlemaker does open you up to the niche market that really wants the type of customer service that comes from good smaller candlemakers. There's a good portion of the candle market that wants the "Hallmark" feel with their candles, and being catered to on an individual basis as only small businesses can makes them feel that they have a friend in the industry that makes the product just for them.

    Of course I think that extends to other products as well. We have a local dairy in our town that can't keep milk on the shelves it flies off so fast. But they like that "local, family feel" about their product so they decided not to expand.

    I think that is a good part of their appeal.

  4. What I have done here is posted about soymakers running down paraffin, again, that is the subject at hand.

    Yes, that's what I said. You used the same sort of hyperbole to make your point about paraffin bashing that you accuse the soy makers of using to sell their product.

    I guess life imitates life--I mean now we have murderers and they are the victims--poor guys made bad decisions, not their fault they murdered!

    "Murdered"? Are sales really that bad for you? Or could it be that the soy people here were commisserating with the paraffin makers that they also see something wrong with the hyperbole used to sell soy candles and it has affected all sides in a negative way (although hardly to the point of killing the candle industry)?

  5. So I guess in your world you consider anything said acceptable unless it does financial damage? Glad you think it is funny. Some people have ethics and don't stoop to that level. That is what this whole post has been about. At least you let your colors show.

    No, actually I found it funny that you would engage in the same sort of hyperbole to make your point about paraffin bashing that you accuse the soy nazis of using to sell their product.

    If you'll notice I also laughed at Top calling drugs "a renewable resource"; of course he has the ability to commit such acts of hyperbole without being quite so prickly about it.

    Personally I see nothing wrong with paraffin candles, unless they're the dollar store kind that travel here in boatloads from the Pacific Rim and have the tendency to turn people off of candles altogether. Many people have submitted pics of beautiful paraffin candles here and I find the carved ones absolutely gorgeous (and as far as I know you can't carve soy at all).

    Using hyperbole to sell your product has the unfortunate side effect of killing your credibility about said product, and it affects all sides. It doesn't mean the soy people all used it and now "the murderers are all crying victim".

    In fact, according to Tess, there are no "murderers", and her well-made paraffin candles aren't suffering a bit from it. Score one for the educated consumer.

  6. try being a soy candle maker and living up to all the over inflated claims that are made.

    At my last craft fair this guy comes up to me and says, "Soy candles, huh?" I said, "Yep." He said, "They're great - plus you can put the wax on your skin!"

    By the time I'd formulated the words, "Um, no, actually...." he'd walked on. Hopefully he found a nice B&B table somewhere.

  7. You can't get the fragrance oil and the wax separated and start over fresh, no. You can remelt and repour the candle, though.

    If you just want to do this at the hobbyist level and don't want to invest a ton of money you should be able to find a postal or kitchen scale and a glass thermometer at almost any big box store for less than $15 combined.

  8. I live in an area that is HIGHLY green oriented. I thought about putting my tarts in those little plastic food service cups... but I know that would so not fly. I'd be berated for creating so much plastic waste!

    See, I find a lot of merit in packaging and claiming that your product is packaged in a "green" way. Many people want candles but want to contribute to landfills as little as possible. Packaging in recycled materials and packaging to a minimum is a great (and legitimate!) selling point.

    Of course once again this can apply to candles of any wax.

  9. Interesting, Top (and thanks for the heads-up about what constitues "renewable resources").

    re: 0006 - obviously a subjective aesthetic observation, and a selling point.

    re: 0007 - a little from column A, a little from column B. I have noticed a difference in the "odor" of paraffin vs soy vs beeswax (have not tried palm or other waxes purposefully) and they all smell different to me without FO.

    Saying they "may" increase airborne compounds by being burned in an enclosed environment applies to any wax, obviously.

    re: 0008 - absolutely true, unless the price of paraffin vs soy is being artificially controlled. Most paraffin waxes are almost twice the cost of what soycandle is letting the GB wax go for.

    re: 0009 - obviously, YMMV.

    There are a million companies that say they sell products that make your privates large--does everyone believe them? Can they still do it under our laws? Yes.

    Actually no, they can't. Just like Ford can't show the road through an empty windshield and claim they have the clearest windshields ever, companies must make claims that appeal truthfully to "a reasonable consumer".

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