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Coloring for home made candles - 2/10/2008 2:43:19 PM   
MstrDennynSlave


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Master and I enjoy wax play. We want to make some home made candles that have color to them so they will show up in pictures. Food coloring stains, but dont know if it would stain in parafin or not. Has anyone made candles with color? If so what have you used that worked out good? Thank you for any help you can give us.


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RE: Coloring for home made candles - 2/10/2008 2:46:23 PM   
MadamShy


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in some craft stores they have candle color blocks check it out


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RE: Coloring for home made candles - 2/10/2008 3:01:19 PM   
kc692


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I bought a soy candle.  It melts at a different temperature, and I know although a local shop had color, but have no idea how they made it.  It tends to stay a bit more flexible unlike regular paraffin when cooled.

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RE: Coloring for home made candles - 2/10/2008 6:33:22 PM   
DesFIP


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google candle making supplies.
http://shop.candlesandsupplies.com/candles/category.asp?catalog%5Fname=Candles&category%5Fname=Candle+Coloring&Page=1&path=Colors+%26+Dyes%23Candle+Coloring

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RE: Coloring for home made candles - 2/10/2008 7:18:07 PM   
Tannie


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I use Crayola crayons when I want to add some color to a batch of candles.  All you need to do is chop them up and add them to whatever batch you are making.  If you group them by color type (reds, oranges, blues, etc) you'll have enough to color each batch, as long as the batches aren't huge.

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RE: Coloring for home made candles - 2/10/2008 9:25:28 PM   
TheLaughingDomme


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Best bet if you're just starting with your own candles is to buy the wax at craft stores in whatever colors you like until you get a feel for how to make candles more custom to your liking. Someone mentioned soy and those are great because some traditional candles give people headaches, soy most times won't, and yes, it burns far longer, has less chemicals, and is easier to work with. Worth the expense, but can still stain, so test it first. If no one has any allergies, and you get into making your own, you can also add oils. I've made candles with Ylang Ylang and Nag Champra oil- very sexy! XO

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RE: Coloring for home made candles - 2/11/2008 12:49:13 AM   
ProlificNeeds


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Blocks of raw paraffin wax and crayons to add color. Heat the wax indirectly. (IE, smaller pot for the wax inside a larger pot full of water) add bits of crayon until you have the desired color(It doesn't take much), then pour into a mold. I use to use the empty toilet paper rolls, with cardboard on the bottom, line it with wax paper if you find it sticking too much. Throw it in the freezer to harden the outside quickly once you've filled whatever mold you choose to use. Putting ice cubes or crushed ice inside your mold gives you a 'holey' pattern inside the candle itself and looks neat, and also means your candle center hardens quicker. Don't forget to use a cotton string wick!
If you make a 'solid' form candle, it may take a day or three to actually finish solidifying in the middle, depending on how thick it is.

If you want to go straight from pot, just melt down your wax, add color and use from the pot during play if you like. I usually find it easier to just have a whack of candle lit and ready to go. NOTE: the 'holey' pattern that crushed ice adds allows the wax to dribble out randomly at times, great for surprise spill over if you're making the victim hold or balance the candles.

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RE: Coloring for home made candles - 2/11/2008 5:30:19 AM   
antipode


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Try the arts and crafts forum, or Google "candle making"...

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RE: Coloring for home made candles - 2/11/2008 9:36:02 AM   
MstrDennynSlave


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Thank you everyone, some very good information. We will check all out.
Again thanks.



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RE: Coloring for home made candles - 2/11/2008 11:26:51 AM   
giveeverything


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crayons work the best!  I've been making and selling candles for years... it's the only thing I'll use for color.

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