Candle Safety
Short rules, good reasons.
Beeswax candles are among the safest candles you can burn in a home — no petroleum, no synthetic fragrance, and a cleaner burn than most alternatives. That said, every candle is a controlled fire on a tabletop, and a few short habits will keep it that way.
Before you light it.
- Trim the wick to about ¼ inch before every lighting, including the very first one. A tall wick burns smoky; a too-short one drowns in the wax pool. Small scissors or a proper wick-trimmer both work fine.
- Set the candle on a stable, heat-resistant surface — a trivet, a ceramic plate, a dedicated candle tray. Not directly on wood furniture, not on paper, not on fabric.
- Keep at least 12 inches of clearance above the candle and on every side: nothing hanging that could catch, nothing stacked that could be nudged over.
- Remove the lid entirely before lighting. A lit candle with the lid partially on will smother itself — or worse, trap heat against the glass.
While it's burning.
- Never leave a burning candle unattended. Every time. Every candle. This is the single most important line on this page.
- Keep away from drafts, pets, and children. A tail can clear a candle faster than you can.
- First light: burn long enough to form a nice full burn pool. Beeswax has a "memory" — if the first burn tunnels, it will keep tunneling. Let the melt pool reach the edge of the vessel before you snuff it, however long that takes. Beeswax takes longer to get there than paraffin, and that's fine — it is what it is.
- After that: burn in unhurried sessions, not marathons. Extended single burns let the wax overheat and the wick overgrow — snuff it, let it rest, come back when you're ready.
- If the flame starts dancing, smoking, or splitting, snuff it, let it cool completely, trim the wick, and re-light.
When you're done.
- Snuff the flame with a snuffer or a lid replacement after the flame is out (never use the lid to put out the flame while it's burning). Blowing the flame out works but sprays bits of hot wax.
- Let it cool fully before moving or covering it. The glass is hotter than it looks. Beeswax stays warm for longer than paraffin.
- Stop burning when about ½ inch of wax remains at the bottom. Below that, the flame gets too close to the vessel, which can crack glass or scorch a tin.
A few beeswax-specific things.
- Frosting / bloom. Beeswax sometimes develops a pale white dusting on top as it cures. That's pure beeswax crystalizing out — it's harmless and cosmetic, not a defect. A hair dryer on low warmth will smooth it right out if it bothers you.
- Tunneling on the first light. Beeswax has a high melting point, so a too-short first burn can leave unused wax around the edges. Fix: burn longer next time, or gently press the cool wax inward with the back of a warm spoon to reset the surface.
- Scent intensity. These candles carry their scent through actual herb infusion, not synthetic fragrance oils. They smell softer and subtler than fragrance-oil candles. If you were expecting a candle that perfumes the whole house, that isn't how these work — the scent in the room is closer to "someone is making herb tea in the next room." That's the trade-off of using only the real plant.
Pillars, tins, and melts.
- Pillars need a holder with a rim high enough to catch any wax run-off — pillar holders, hurricane glass, or a well-chosen plate. Never burn a pillar directly on wood or on unprotected cloth.
- Tins should be placed on a trivet or heat-safe surface — the metal can get hot enough to scorch a wood tabletop. Never light a tin with the lid on.
- Wax melts are flameless. Use them in an electric or tea-light-warmed melter of the appropriate size. Don't put melt wax directly onto any surface or heating element that isn't designed for it.
If something goes wrong.
- If wax catches fire: do not use water. Smother with a lid or a metal cooking pan cover. For larger flames, use a Class B fire extinguisher.
- If wax spills on fabric: let it fully harden, scrape off the bulk, then sandwich the fabric between two plain paper bags or clean brown paper and iron on low heat — the remaining wax transfers into the paper.
- If the candle doesn't seem right — tunneling badly, wick drowning repeatedly, scent off — email me directly. I would rather send you a replacement than have you fight with a candle I made.
Candles in general carry a small risk if they're treated carelessly, and almost none if they're treated like the small contained fires they are. Beeswax is gentler on both the air and the flame than most alternatives — but all fire is still fire, and the rules apply. Burn carefully, and enjoy the quiet.