Everything You Thought You Knew About Burning Candles Is Wrong

Ever consider yourself something of a candle connoisseur. You’ve smelled a ton over the years and lit plenty. Tapers, votives, you name it—there might be some kind of candle in practically every room of your home. But have you ever given much thought to your burning technique? Didn’t think so.
Not Choosing Your Candle Wisely - Candles burn roughly five to seven hours per ounce. So the bigger the candle, the longer the burn time. But what you probably didn't know—and honestly, it seems counterintuitive—is that a three wick candle in the same exact vessel as a one wick candle will burn slower—not faster. Three wicks will actually extend the life of a candle because rather than tunneling straight down the center of the candle (near the one wick) when lit, the wax gets hot enough (from the three flames) to actually pool across the entire candle. This way, you're using every bit of wax in the vessel as you burn it. If you're worried at all about indoor air quality, soy wax with an essential oil-based fragrance will give you the cleanest burn.
Only Trimming Your Wick Once - Trim the wick to 1/4-inch each time before burning to prevent your candle from smoking a lot and creating soot marks on your container. In fact, long or crooked wicks can actually cause uneven burning, dripping, or flaring. The good news is you can use regular scissors or a nail clipper to make cuts. No need for a dedicated.
Not Burning Your Candle Long Enough the First Time - If you want your candle to burn evenly and last as long as possible, you have to light it for about 3 to 4 hours the first time you burn it. Wax has a muscle memory, and it's going to burn in the same pattern every time. So if you light it for long enough the first time, that will ensure that your candle pools completely across all of the wax, setting it up to continue to do so with each subsequent burn. Otherwise, tunneling, where the wick burns straight down the center of a candle without creating a full melt pool, can occur. Once your candle starts tunneling, you're losing all that peripheral wax surface area for future burns.
Giving Up on an Improperly Burned Candle - Yeah, you read that right. You have a couple of options to bring a slightly tunneled candle back to life. You can use a hair dryer on low to even out the wax surface or pop the candle in an oven at 175 degrees for about 5 minutes. These two actions will melt the wax, so that it's smooth and level across the top again. Scoop out any wax that flows over the wick.
Not Watching Your Burn Time - Do not burn your candle for longer than four to six hours at a time. If you let the whole candle get liquid, the wick or wicks can float to the side, and it's going to burn unevenly after that.
Blowing Out Your Candles - Seriously. You thought snuffers were another marketing ploy, but when you blow out a flame, it actually creates and spreads those little annoying black ash particles that get stuck in the wax. You don't have to buy a snuffer though. Just get a candle with a lid, and it'll smother the flame in the same way. Plus, a top keeps dust and dirt out.
Not Reusing Your Vessels - Look for candles that the container is designed to be upcycled. Ceramic, metal, and glass are food-and drink-safe, but concrete is better as, say, a planter, a makeup brush holder, or a pencil cup.







