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SPH77

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Posts posted by SPH77

  1. My candles are getting stuck on two occasions:

    1. When I pour parafin 1425 if I do not use fragrance my candles get stuck. If I use fragrance they come out great. Do I need to add something to help with scentless?

    2. When I pour soy nature wax p-1. They have been getting stuck with fragrance. Do I need some sort of additive to help with the release?

    All products purchased at Lonestar. Thanks in advance!

  2. Pouring the wax too cool would give you a rough surface with jump lines, and maybe some bubbles at the surface. If you had a smooth surface with bubbles beneath it, it would be something else. That's what I'm imagining from what you say, but if you could show a photo the answer might be apparent.

    You are correct, smooth with bubbles underneath. I tried to include images...lets see if they come through

    post-11914-139458464032_thumb.jpg

    post-11914-139458464036_thumb.jpg

  3. Maybe you can tell us a little more about what wax you're using, additives, pouring temperature and whatnot.

    Pouring wax a second time wouldn't normally have any different results. The intense heat from the bottom of the Presto could make fragrance oil fizz though, so I wonder if you really did end up with frozen soda of sorts.

    You will inevitably get some answers suggesting that the wax got air mixed into it, but it's not that.

    Wax is 4625, I was using Blue Cobbler Fragrance, and a blue liquid dye. I had to wait for some of the wax to harden in the pan to get it out. I was a bit frustrated so I didn't take a temp on that pour, I just waited till it was all melted. Would pouring it too cool have that effect?

  4. You need to pour your final pour hotter than the first or second so the wax adhers well to the other wax. That should ellminate the line you see. I also do 3 three pours on straight paraffin wax. And a thermometer is very important to get the proper melting, mixing, and pouring temperatures. Also, to know how much higher to heat your wax for the final pour. All that being said, your candle is very pretty and cheerful looking.

    Ok, so newbie question: do you actually need to make sure the re-pour is hotter than the original pour, or just hot enough to melt the wax? Does that make sense?

  5. Ok, this might be a little weird,

    but I was making some pillars yesterday and one of them sprung a leak at the bottom. About half of the wax drained out into a baking pan I use just in case something like that happens :cheesy2:

    When the wax cooled down enough I put it back into my presto pot remelted and re-poured in a different (clean) mold. I also dumped what was left in the mold into the presto.

    I poured two from that batch or color (One leaked the other didn't). The pillar or wax that I poured twice had all of these tiny air bubbles in the finished product. It looked kind of like a frozen soda. I actually really liked it in an artistic sort of way. So my question is this: How can I reproduce that look with out the headache of what actually happened. BTW- the one that did not leak, looked completely clean and normal.

    Also- I did use fragrance and liquid dye if that has any effect.

    Finally, I am a fairly new candle maker.

    Thanks!

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