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R.S.

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Everything posted by R.S.

  1. GL just added Chocolate Orange. I have not tried it yet, but smells strong OOB.
  2. I would do this for you as well. I can't tell from your profile where you live. Obviously it would make sense to order from someone who lives close to you to avoid shipping costs. and someone here HAS to live close to you!
  3. please note that you got two different methods up above, giving slightly different answers. Either should work fine unless you are maximizing the fragrance load for the wax, which most of us don't do anyways.
  4. I'm assuming that 624 grams is the weight of the wax alone, to which you are adding fragrance oil. If that's not what I am reading, please ignore what I'm about to do. Take 624 and divide by 0.9. That gives you 693 grams. That's your total weight with fragrance oil. Therefore the fragrance oil part is 693-624=69 grams Notice that 69/693 is pretty darn close to 10% Generically, the fragrance weight is Wax weight times fragrance load divided by (1-fragrance load) where fragrance load is expressed as a decimal.... 10% = 0.1
  5. Chefs temper all the time.. you can't throw an egg mixture into anything hot or you'll get scrambled eggs. So you take some of the hot mixture into the eggs to raise the temp, then pour the egg mixture into the hot liquid.
  6. Well when I was doing CB135 straight up, I would pour around 107. I know some go lower. I'm developing my own blend and have to pour higher now.
  7. I heat to 180 - 185, maybe that makes a difference???
  8. I don't know what I'm doing differently, but I hardly get any frosting with CB135 unless the candle sits around for a few months. Not sure what to tell you here. would be interested to see how many others have frosting issues.
  9. Don't mean to hijack here, but what are Palm Kernals? this is different than palm wax?
  10. I am burning BCN's WYW Fresh Linen. Very nice.
  11. Interesting, with CB135, I haven't had this problem. How long are you heat gunning for? Because I'm doing it just long enough to smooth the top out and there's no "depth" of remelted wax on the sides of my tumbler.. I hope that makes sense... and at times I have to heat gun more than once.
  12. For soy, buy yourself a heat gun in your HD or Lowe's paint department and zap those rough tops away! The tough part about doing repours is that it can leave a little line between the old and repoured wax. If you do want to proceed, typically the temp of the wax is a bit higher than your original pour to try and melt the old wax a bit so it blends in. Most ppl would keep the remaining wax in the melting pot and use that. You wouldn't want to create a new batch of wax just for the repour.
  13. I agree that it's a good idea, but do not, do not, do not mail your samples out. You've got to get your face recognized with your product. you'll get far more attention that way. Mailing them makes them think you're lazy.
  14. Please check out the "Don't Shoot the Messenger" thread before making any decision.
  15. cowgirl, What a terrific, well thought out, informative post that was. thank you very much. (and just to be sure no one misinterprets this... no sarcasm here, I really mean it)
  16. I'm ok with the brownish shade, it is what it is. I too use tumblers (7.5 oz) but didn't care for the CD12 it burned ok at the bottom, but too much hang up getting to the bottom of the candle. And flame in the middle almost died out.
  17. I have tried every wick known to man in CB135 and I like the CDs the best. Just my observation.
  18. Well I ordered from BCS, because the most recent increase hasn't hit them yet. But in online chat with them, they said it would be soon, I guess that means with their next shipment.
  19. I just bought 150 lbs of wax which should easily last me through the rest of this year. It's horrendous what's happening to prices.
  20. Agree with everything you said except this part. Wet spots occur BECAUSE of shrinkage... causing the wax to release from the glass.
  21. Babean... I use CB135 as well and sometimes get great adhesion and sometimes not, even within the same batch. You can do a search on wet spots and find all sorts of threads on it. The reality of the situation is that it is just the nature of the wax, and there's no real way to stop it, regardless of any instructions from the manufacturer or anyone else. I hate it too, but it just happens that way. As for throw, I find that most oils throw quite well in CB135, but again, hot throw is a very subjective thing. I can fill up a small room, but not a large room and certainly not a house. Some of my best fragrance oils I can smell down the hall a bit. It really is a matter of opinion and preference. Good luck!
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