Candles - Make A New Candle From Left Over Candle Stubs
86I love candles, especially the expensive scented kind. My family never has to wonder what to give me at gift giving time - a Yankee Candle always fills the bill. But at $21.00 for a 14.5 ounce jar, I am not going to buy myself one. And even thrift store candles have gone up - two bucks for a dusty used candle! What are they thinking!
Then, when the wick has run down and the candle is pretty much finished, there is still some wax left over. Why not reuse it to create a new candle! This simple practice is easy to do, sustainable, and thrifty!
So, I stretch my candles by saving the wax left over when the wick has run out. It's simple to create a new candle with the old wax.
Candles Made of Soft Wax
The wax in jar candles is usually pretty soft, so I mix in hard candle stubs.
If you use a lot of softer wax, just make your own jar candle with, say, a jelly jar.
Just make sure the colors will mix well. If you mix opposite colors, you could wind up with brown or some murky, unattractive mess. Brown blends well with orange and red. Greens and blues go well together. Yellow and orange work well. And yellow and pink or orange and pink will produce a nice peach tint. Of course, white will just lighten up the other colors you might use.
When mixing candles, use scents
For this batch, I used brown, yellow, red, and orange. Both the brown and orange were spicy scents. The yellow was a very strong ginger scent and the red was odorless. The brown was was very soft, a second time around Yankee Candle.
Don't mix scents that might not match. You can produce a wonderful new aromatic mixture if you blend similar scents or scents that naturally go together. The Yankee Candles are so strongly scented that their aroma will probably predominate.
Certain scents have special attributes used to create a mood. The concept of using scent to relax or energize is called aroma-therapy.
Candles - Make New From Old
- Buy a wick and metal wick anchors at a craft store or online. They are pretty cheap and will last a long time.
- Find a nice, study thick glass. Jelly jars work well as they can take the heat.
- Remove all paper, old wicking, and all other debris from the candle. Break into pieces.
- Melt the wax slowly in a double boiler on low heat.
- Never melt wax over direct heat. My sister did this and scared the heck out of herself by producing a fireball!. Which made a very interesting design on the ceiling.
- Prime the wick by dipping into melted wax. Let it harden before inserting into candle glass. A primed wick will burn evenly.
- Feed some of the wick through the hole in the center of the anchor. Keep the wicking longer than yo need. You can cut It off later.
- Drip a small bit of wax into the glass jar. When the little blob sets, press the metal anchor into the wax pointy side down. Smash it so the metal points grasp the wick
- Gently pour melted wax int the jar, reserving some of the wax.
- Make sure the wick is straight. Roll it around a pencil and set the pencil on the top edge of the glass to keep the wick straight.
- As the wax sets up , a depression will appear around the wick. fill it in with the reserved wax. You will probably have to melt it again.
- When the candle has set up, unroll the wick from around the pencil and trim to about 1/4 of an inch.
- Clean up - never pour excess melted wax down the drain. If you have enough left over, let it harden and save it for the next candle. Clean bowl by repeatedly filling it with boiing water.
- Enjoy!
vote upvote downshareprintflag
- Useful (7)
- Funny
- Awesome (1)
- Beautiful
- Interesting (1)
CommentsLoading...
Oh I love candles too !! I have done this for years and never thought about hubbing it! I used the microwave but the first time i didn't remove all the wich and the metal caught on fire I didn't do it anymore! using the double broiler idea is great! I love Yankee candle as well. Light one up my friend, great minds think alike. I never thought of the color scheme that is a great point. (You can get old candles at yard sales much cheaper) I would use the jelly jars and make candles for gifts, maybe add some oil and who would know the difference!
dori
Great hub and what a wonderful idea!!!!
I used to do this when I was a kid and my Mom would yell at me when she'd catch me. I guess I was ahead of my time.
What a wonderful idea! Will have to tell my daughter about this...she loves candles.
Those are great ideas! Thank you!
I enjoy reading your work. Informative and instructive, as well.
Now this I will try, because I have so many left over candles. I love candles and hate to throw them away, so I will be doing this.
You know I hate you! It's writers like you that make it hard for me to write. I get addicted to your work and can't stop reading. You are so good at what you do, which seems to be everything. Okay this is my last one of today, I promise myself, maybe not just one more.
I knew following you was a wise decision. Believe me or not I was looking for a hub like this and I'm happy to have found it, I'm very tired of throwing away all that wax. Great hub, thank you very much Dolores.
Hello Delores, I loved this hub on reusing old left over wax from other candles. I have been saving my wax from candles for some time, yet never have made them into candles yet. I am excited at the prospect of doing so. Thank you for sharing your experience with us. Its great to save a little money and enjoy thins like candles! Ocean
I have got to do this . We have so much in common in the things we like lol . I have to keep up with your hubs , I love reading them . Keep up the good work.
Love your hub. Just started making large pillar candles.
Dolores...Dolores, I knew I was saving old candle pieces for a reason! I was waiting to meet you, so you can tell me what to do! I am so on this! I'm going to the craft store today...plan to make a hobo bag from an old skirt.
I'll pick up these supplies...wish I had kept the jars.
Hey Dolores...my candle jars turned out great! I had some canning jars from my Grandmother. I just wanted to let you know. I haven't tried the bread yet, my neighbor who is from Trinidad, brought me Coconut Sweet Bread, which I have been feasting off!! Chile' is it GOOD!
Wow thanks for the great hub this is some very useful information
We use a lot of candles in Sweden,and for the Holidays there will always be a bunch of left over candles, that usually winds up in the trash. Such a waste!
So Dolores, thank you for this great tip! Now I know what to do.
Thanks!
Couldn't you use old, washed, soup or vegetable cans to melt the wax in rather than risk messing up a pot?
Great information. I also have been throwing away left over wax although I use the jars to make seashell crafts. With your information I'll be able to use some of those leftovers for my own candles. I'll just re-use one of the original candle jars.
This is an extremely economical and helpful idea! Thanks to your eye-opening hub, I decided not to waste the candle-stubs! I am quite fond of vibrantly-colored candles. The instructions with pictures are well-explained. Well-done!
Thanks for SHARING. Useful & Interesting. Voted up.



























Hawkesdream Level 2 Commenter 2 years ago
what a useful tip, I usually end up throwing the bits away, such a waste now methinks.