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FarmerJill

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Posts posted by FarmerJill

  1. We use those every year at Easter vigil Mass. IMO 5" would be way too big and awkward to carry whereas 3" is about perfect. You can make your own by cutting some circles on cardstock and then cutting an "x" in the middle for the candle to slip through. It will look nicer than a paper cup; plus, if appropriate, you have the option to make them colored (as in pink for breast cancer, etc.) Or do a search for paper or plastic "bobeche" to get ready-made. I know Swan's carries them although that's pretty far away for you for shipping. :smiley2:

  2. I've been testing Accu-soy10 for the last ten months and have sort of felt alone in the wilderness because nobody else ever talks about it. Unfortunately, this is the first soy wax I've used so I really have nothing to which to compare it, other than noting what everybody else says about their wax.

    That said, I really like it - easy to work with, smooth tops, creamy, good cold and hot throw. Frosting hasn't been much of an issue, either, except for a few little splotches here and there. That is, until I tried for a Christmas red recently :grin2: but I'll be doing some experimenting with that this week.

    One thing I have noticed compared to most conversations here is that I've been able to wick down a little bit. Now I'm not sure if that's really because of the wax or if it's because I don't mind a little hang-up in order to keep the container from overheating. I use masons, btw, so hang-up is a given but when I first started I was using htp 105s. Now I've settled into mostly 51c or sometimes cd-10.

    Anyway, that's my experience. I'm tickled to hear about somebody else using this, so keep us posted!

    Connie

  3. I'd love to know how you like this one!

    FHG, I'm not AAngel but I can give an opinion (what's new, my family would say :grin2: )

    I initially rejected Grandma's Swinging Eggnog because it just didn't do much for me. Then it was sent to my sister's house in a batch of testers. Oh my! Her three boys -- all pre-teen -- thought that was the best of anything I'd ever sent them, to the point that they were dipping fingers and playing in the wax. IMO the rum scent is fairly strong, although I didn't want the boys to make THAT connection, and maybe that was giving it a negative connotation to me (yeah, there's a story there but it's not pretty and rather pointless all these decades later ;) )

    Anyway, their response was enough to make me reconsider. Plus, the name is one of those that attracts people, although I've renamed it slightly, and the reaction is always a smile and "Yum!".

    In my pot this weekend? Christmas Eve, Cranberry Marmalade and Precious Gifts are all going into mason jars today. And repackaging potpourri/fixins.

  4. Bella Luna, I do exactly what you're suggesting quite often. I like pouring just a clamshell's worth to start out because I want to know how an FO smells in wax before I bother advancing it any further in testing. Plus, it gives me a good idea of a specific FO's curing needs and I know right off the bat about cold throw. The clamshell gets passed around to three testers and if it scores high enough then I think about wicking it. If it's a pain to wick it might still be used for tarts or in my wickless tins so it's not like the effort was wasted.

    I know a lot of people don't do it this way but when I started out it seemed the most logical way of efficiently wading through the ocean of fragrances out there. A big plus is that not all the tester wax gets used up so I now have a "library" of clamshell samples I can refer back to when recommendations for fragrances come up. And they're great to have on hand when thinking about mixing fragrances. I just plop a little of this and a little of that into a tart melter.

  5. AND people still expected a discount on the next order even if I couldn't use the jars they were returning.

    So right you are! We used to offer a small discount to people who returned containers (this wasn't with candles, but with other products we sold) and it was nothing but a PITA that created hard feelings. People would drag in all kinds of junky containers I couldn't use and then pout when they didn't get their 25 cent credit. After filling up my garbage can a few times we put a stop to the practice.

    AAngel, recycling is a wonderful thing but I can't bring myself to re-use a glass container if it's going to a customer. Yes, jars are reused constantly in canning - the purpose for which they're manufactured - and yet they still sometimes break even though exposed to heat for a short time. Used as a candle, however, that glass is exposed to high heat units for several sustained periods of time. I use masons, too, and worry enough about having a new jar break, much less one which has already been stressed repeatedly. But then...I'm a worrier.

  6. I like to keep stock on hand, simply because it (in theory) takes as long for me to pour one pillar, vs pouring ten at the same time.

    Ditto this. Plus, keeping an inventory allows me to take better charge of my daily schedule, as opposed to having the customer in charge.

  7. Farmer Jill,

    What else is growing in them there fields. Where I live helicopters fly over a few times a year and usually find what they are looking for. Never find the people who planted it though. Happens alot on farmland around here. Lots of weed????

    We did have a man not far from us with(weed) growing everywhere in town. In his basement,inside the living area, garage, even in flower beds. UNREAL. I think they were doing better than my flowers(drought) the way it sounded. HUGE.Must have been doing alot of watering and maybe using some Miracle Gro. :wink2:

    LynnS

    Uh oh, Lynn, I guess I'll have to quit bragging about the weed crop or the durn helicopters will be visiting for sure. Thanks for the laugh. Now I gotta go water that funny-looking "fern" in my garden and order me some patchouli. :grin2: :grin2:

    Hope hubby's feeling better.

  8. Does anybody know where I can find Winter Blast? Or is this fragrance just a figment of my imagination? I was sure I ran across it on a supplier's site a few months ago but now that I want it, wouldn't you know, I can't find it to save my life. Any help would be much appreciated.

  9. Best thing was this morning I was finally able to identify St John's Wort - we've got a ton of it! It's growing along our driveway, the road (unsprayed too!), our neighbors driveway.... I see some infused oils in my future this weekend.

    Eew, to us farmers that wort is just another lousy weed! :eek: I was once told to become an herbalist so that I could learn to embrace all those weeds out in the strawberry field. Hasn't happened yet although you'd think so by all the crap growing in my flower beds.

    This weekend is for pouring two fragrances, finishing up the testing on a few others, and transfering notes from a million pieces of loose paper to the computer. Only supposed to be in the 80's up here in the valley, Robin. Come on up for a visit if you need to cool off. I've got shade, lemonade and some weeds...err, I mean herbs in the garden you can pick;)

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