Fruit/Berry Scented Luxury 2 Wick Candle

£18.99

£

Product description

Fruit / Berry Scented, Luxury 2 Wicks Candle. One candle contains 160 – 180 g of soy wax, burn time up to 48 hours.

We add 20% fragrance oil to all candles. It makes our products smell quite strong and last a long time. Please be aware that due to being a hand-made colour, it may slightly vary.

Scents Available:

1. Coconut & Lime. Sweet coconut and lime fragrance opening with lime, lemon, orange, apple, and coconut leading into a soft floral heart resting on a sweet base of vanilla, musk, and gentle woods.
2. Sweet Orange. This fragrance cannot be compared with anything – soft citrus, warming, sweet, cozy, and “smiling”, it creates a good, light, and joyful mood.
3. Black Cherry. Our Black Cherry wax melts have a strong and vibrant scent identical to a tub of ripe cherries. Retaining all the sweetness of Cherry while adding rum notes and deep red tartness.
4. Summer Fruits. Our Summer Fruits wax melts are bursting with a range of sweet fruits and berries to really get the senses going. The main notes of this fragrance are raspberry and strawberry. Enhanced by gentle citrus notes on a sugar-sweet vanilla base.
5. Winter Honeysuckle & Elderflower. Honeysuckle & Elderflower Fragrance is a luscious, winter floral fragrance gently unfolds with subtle citrus nuances of mandarin and lemon, enhanced by succulent winter berries. The fragrance comes into full bloom through floral notes of frosted honeysuckle, jasmine, and elderflower while the sensuous fond of sandalwood, amber, vanilla, and musk completes the fragrance.
6. Spice Pumpkin. A sweet and delicious spiced pumpkin fragrance with notes of creamy pumpkin, a fruity accord of juicy raspberry, strawberry, and blackberry with sweet cherry apple and lemon and orange, apple, pear. With the base of cinnamon and clove, creating that extra little spice. Perfect for Halloween!
Accompanied by the bay, cinnamon, and ginger on a vanilla base. This fragrance creates a warm ambient aroma, perfect on those cold winter nights.
7. Coconut. The coconut aroma is the scent of languid idleness and absolute relaxation, serenity. It has a positive effect on the emotional state and improves mood. Coconut is credited with simply miraculous, sensual qualities, it has long earned a reputation as the strongest aphrodisiac.
8. Kiwi. The aroma smells exactly like a plump, ripe, juicy kiwi fruit! Its deliciously sweet scent will feel you with positive vibes, rejuvenating and revitalizing your soul.
9. Lemon. Lemon has a crisp, sharp, citrus fresh smell, which is a pale green-yellow in color and is watery in viscosity.
10. Raspberry. Our Raspberry wax melts smell an identical scent to freshly picked ripe raspberries. Bursting with crisp sweet and fruity aromas, you really can’t go wrong with this popular scent.
11. Mango. It is tropical, fruity, exotic. Mango is a sunny aroma, not sugary, but fresh and even a little coniferous. This aroma is completely unique and unlike anything else. He is recognizable and pleasant.

How to use scented candles

1. Trim the wick. Every. Single. Time.

Each time you want to burn your candle, start by trimming the wick to between 1/8 and 1/4 inches long. You can use scissors, nail clippers (that’s my personal favorite), or our wick trimmer, but no matter what you do, always trim, every single time.

Why every time? Trimmed wicks will give you a cleaner, brighter burn. Untrimmed wicks are a lot more likely to take on a strange shape that dulls and obscures the flame. Also  excessively long wicks cause nasty smoky stains that end up on your glass jar candles – not a problem with our tin candles however trimming the wick keeps the flame in control.

2. Let the wax melt all the way across.

Once your candle’s lit, DON’T blow it out until the top layer of wax has melted all the way across. This might take several hours  so don’t set out to burn a candle at all unless you’ve got the time to do so. This is also called candle memory.

Whenever you fail to achieve full melt, you’re contributing to a process called tunnelling. The wick starts to sink lower and lower, like a tunnel is forming right through the center of the candle. Eventually, the tunnel will grow so deep that it’ll be tough to light the wick at all. More importantly, all that unmelted wax on the sides represents hours of lovely fragrance and burn time you bought but won’t ever get to utilize.

It takes patience, but if you melt the wax all the way across every time you burn, the surface of the candle will stay flat and the sides of the tin (or jar) will stay clean, all the way down until the candle is spent.

4. Buy multi-wick candles.

If your like me, it’s hard to find enough time for a proper burn. The solution? Buy a candle with two or more wicks. More flames means more heat — which leads to a quicker melt.It also throws more scent.

Be wary of extra-wide candles that only have one wick. If the candle surface has just one wick and a diameter of more than 5-6cm, don’t buy it. One wick will never produce enough heat to melt it all the way across, especially within 4 hours..

5. Keep the flame away from moving air.

Do your best to keep your burning candle away from open windows, fans, air conditioners or heavily trafficked areas where people walk back and forth a lot. Moving air can disturb the flame, which can also stain the tin or jar, and can give you tunneling and other issues.

6. Dip your wicks to extinguish the flame.

This is probably one of the most important steps that people miss.
You’ve probably noticed that when you blow out a candle, it smokes – sometimes a lot. That’s because the core of the wick continues to burn for a short time, the inside of the wick can turn to carbon (ash), making it brittle and the candle hard to light the next time.

Then there’s the smell. After allowing a fragrant candle to burn, why wipe out all that beautiful scent with the smell of smoke? It can be dangerous, you could accidentally blow some of the melted wax right off of the candle.

How do you dip a wick? Use ‘wick dippers,’ However, you can use anything from tweezers to a knife. After you extinguish the candle, prop up the wick, pulling it out of the wax so it’s ready to light next time.

Candles safety instructions

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