✨ Ignite Your Creativity with Every Pour!
The Candlemaker's Store Natural Soy Wax is a premium 10 lb. bag designed for candle making enthusiasts. With a melt point of 121-125°F and the ability to hold up to 15% fragrance, this eco-friendly wax ensures a delightful hot throw. Perfect for blending with other waxes, it empowers you to create beautiful tarts and candles while making a sustainable choice.
Specific Uses For Product | Surface Protection |
Antenna Location | Making Candles |
Number of Items | 1 |
Unit Count | 160.0 Ounce |
Item Weight | 4 Pounds |
M**A
Great price great product
Great price great product
T**.
Best Soy wax I've used so far
I just started making candles and I love this soy blend rather than the regular soy wax with no additives. I couldn't seem to get it right with the regular 100% soy. But with the GW 444, I was able to get smooth tops without a 2nd poor with a great scent throw. Not saying I got perfect smooth tops every time , but 4 out of 5 candles I did. Also this wax is good for making whipped cream wax once it cools.I heated the wax up to about 190 to 200 using a candy thermometer. Took it out of the boiler and poured into a Pyrex measuring cup which cools it faster. I add my color if needed. I add my fragrance at 180 degrees. (If it cooled down below 180, heat it up again in the microwave in 30 sec increments until it reaches 180. 180 is the temp that the fragrance will mesh with the wax and maintain it's scent. Use a digital thermometer for quick readings for the fragrance pour and container pour) Mix well with a wooden skewer. Pour at 145 degrees exactly for good results. And it comes out great if you don't touch or move the container after it's poured. I've learned, messing with it or moving it after pouring could cause some issues on the surface when it cools. So pour in a place where it's out of the way and it can sit still.This wax says it can take up to 15% fragrance. I misread that when I started using it only using 12%. But it still throws great. But for sure I will try 15% now. lolOver all, I see people having all kinds of problems like I was. My advice is to use this 444 soy wax, get a digital thermometer, get good concentrated fragrances that are really potent and get a scale that weighs in ounces and and can "tear" (Zero out the weight of the pot or measuring cup on the scale so that it will only weigh the new liquid being poured in). Guessing the wax to fragrance ratio can mess up a potentially good candle. So, calculate everything!! You will be glad you did cause you will get the most out of the wax and fragrance. If your candle container holds 8 oz, measure out 7 oz of wax on the scale. The 1 ounce is your fragrance which will make it 8oz for your container plus that little .05 that the wax allows itself to hold.7 oz (wax) x 0.15% (fragrance) = 1.05. 1.05 is the fragrance that you will measure into your 7 oz of wax at 180 degrees. if you want to use a full 8 oz of wax then times that to .15%. (1.20) Just make sure your container can hold over 9 oz. If not, have a "left overs" wicked candle container to pour in. Once you fill it with left over wax, you go a new mult-iscented candle for the house. :)I hope this helps point you in the right direction. It took a lot of researching and messed up candles to get decent looking ones. I too am still perfecting this craft. I just wanted to pass on what I learned.Happy Candle Making.
J**S
So easy even a man can do it.
My first time making large container candles and my first time using 444 turned out to be a really excellent experience. I just decided to try this after spending a zillion dollars on commercial candles for gifts and myself. Masculine scented candles are hard to find and when you can find them they seem to have a 'testosterone mark-up'. I had tried to make soy candles with a small all-in-one kit a couple of weeks ago. They were ok, but this stuff made amazing creamy, smooth candles. The tops are beautiful and professional looking - not at all the experience I had with the kit's wax. I accidentally heated the wax to about 210 degrees before I realized it, so I took the pour pot out of the double boiler and let the wax cool to 185 or so before mixing in the fragrance oil (Tobacco with a 210 flash point). I mixed the snot out of it and then I let it cool down to about 125 before pouring. I used wood wicks in some cool tumblers I found at a discount store. I made two 1lb candles and had enough left over for a little jelly jar. If I had been thinking, I would have been more 'mathy' to get exactly the right amount, but it was my first time.Some things I noticed:1. Use weight - not volume - even for the fragrance oil. This, as it turns out, is vital to your sanity.2. Heat the wax to at least 185 and pour the fragrance oil in at that point if it has a higher flash point than 185. If it's lower, wait until the wax is in the 130 range.3. You should pour into your containers between 120 and 140. I heated my containers in the over at 170 under someone's recommendation. I'm not sure it did anything, but it made me more confident to pour into jars that were hotter than the wax.4. Use wick stickers instead of wax to position your wick tabs. Otherwise your pour will just melt it and your wicks will move. The stickers don't melt.5. If your wick says it's specifically for a size of container, go up at least one size of wick or use two to get a good clean, even melt pool.I will definitely use the 444 again.Update: After burning these candles for several hours, I can say that the scent throw is excellent. It fills a small room pretty quickly. After just a few minutes, I could smell the fragrance from a few feet away. Also, it works really well with the wood wicks. Absolutely no soot and I haven't had to trim any wicks. The candles also seem to be really efficient. I've been burning a 22oz Colonial Candle (paraffin) for a few days at it is 1/3 gone. The soy candles have hardly changed. I'm very impressed with how easy this has been. It's a no brainer for me.
J**P
Great candle making wax!
I got this wax and was going through reviews had some worries because this was my first time making homemade candles. I did lots of researching on how to make candles and seeing other's experiences with the different types of candle wax and which would be best for me and my projects. I made a bunch of candles testing out different temperatures and different amounts of color and essential oil added. I discovered on accident that due to maybe elevation and weather or some other factors I needed to raise the temperature higher than recommended in most candle making instructions online for soy wax. I had done what was recommended with a lower temperature and my candle wax looked cracked on the top, some also came out looking like bowls of ice cream which just gives me more candle making ideas. I had added very little of the color and scent in one and added a lot more in another. Then I raised the temperature on another and added even more of the color and scent versus the cracked candle with a lot already. Temperature was the big factor for me. Nothing wrong with the quality of the wax itself. Also pouring temperature was another factor, I needed it higher to get a smoother top. Lower temp made a lip around the edge of candle holder higher. So all in all this wax is perfect! I didn't have any issues with the candle not working like a store bought candle or scent and color. It came in a resealable bag making it easy to store. Good price.
D**Y
Great Buy
It was easy to use, and it dries in a speedy time. It has no bad smell or stickiness and it soft to feel.
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