You would have had candles made of either tallow or beeswax. Beeswax was the preferred material because tallow burns black and can even leave a residue on your walls.
I have some questions. Would they have reserve the mug used to pour the molded candles exclusively for this task alone? How would you scrub all the wax out of the cooking pot? Im sure that a cooking pot like that wasnt used exclusively for melting wax (I could be wrong though). How much would a candle sell for? Would it be typical for the Lady and Lord of the house to allow their cook to create candles for profit for themselves?
@@alyceweirick3916 I was wondering that myself. Dipping candles takes so much wax. It would be tempting to leave it in the pot. But on the other hand pots were super expensive.
I'm a beeswax candle maker, I use modern tools but the method is still the same all these years later. Every time I make my candles I feel connected to the past. 💛
There are so many reasons that I adore this channel. I just realized that one reason, I think, is that the narration is minimal and realistic, as if we are watching. Many channels have hosts who talk endlessly, and they don’t always have any knowledge. I enjoy hearing you both talk, but I learn from watching and reading the subtitles. I’m sitting by my own fire right now, marveling at all the cooking you do. Thanks for all the hard work you all put into these videos.
I couldn't agree more! I have sensory issues and too much sound and talking is very overwhelming and overloading to me. This channel is quite enjoyable and I love the captions and interaction when there is. Lol. Many times I find myself chuckling because I can follow along much better and catch the humor in a lot of the videos and details as well.
When I was little,we had a school field trip about the days of old and we made candles. We would form a line and we each had a wick and we would go to the pot of hot wax and dip our wick in and go around to the back of the line and do it again until we had a nice candle. It was so fun and to me is the best way to do it!
You can make the dipped candles straight by tying a small weight like a metal nut onto the bottoms of the wicks. After enough dips that the candles are stiff, you can cut off the weights and heat them up to reclaim the wax.
I liked the dip method of making candles, best! They may look a bit crooked, but it gives the candles Character! Many years ago, I made dolls' house sized candles using that dip method. They turned out beautifully! It was fun to make miniature candles using the dip method. I love these videos, and learn a lot about the "good old days"! ~Janet in Canada
I discovered your channel randomly when I was searching for some ideas for my story. As someone who dreams of being a housewife (that is if, the circumstances call for it), I find your videos to be a detox for the mind from this technology obsessed complex world. Subscribed 👍
@@Iceis_Phoenix I am a housewife. It’s by no means boring. I am a mom of 3, whom I homeschool. I run and manage the house. I also make extra money by doing side hobbies. It’s not for everybody, but trust when I say it’s not boring. I’m so busy that I seldom have time to just relax unless it’s late at night. (Such as right now, as I wait up for my husband who will be home within the hour, it’s past midnight currently.)
I roleplay as a hobby and I find channels like this so informative for helping me learn the historical low-tech stuff for my writing. I really like this channel's simple no fuss no frills approach.
I make candles using the dip method, yet after each dip in the wax I dip in tap water just repeat dip wax, dip water, ...... I do have a mold as well, but have not used it yet. Making candles is a very soothing project. So much enjoyment in each video, thank you for doing them. In Joy
It is not necessary to dip in cold water, as long as the candle has time to cool down between repeated dippings. Moisture on the candle surface can actually lead to a bumpy candle surface, But perhaps that is what you want? In my family, if we need to cool the candles down more than just a couple laps walking around the room will achieve, then we take a walk around the house outdoors in the cooler air between our dips. This is always sufficient, but then again we make our candles in the fall and winter when it is cool outside.
My word, the moulds are really fiddly! I do prefer the dipping method. Unless you want posh dinner candles, a candle is a candle and gives off exactly the same light. Wonderful to watch in this crazy fast-paced world of ours.
A trick to free the candles from the molds easier is that after a few uses the molds will have a slight layer of wax left in them. Being like butter in a cake pan giving them a light dusting with flour before pouring helps to free the candle from the mold. If there's any leftover flour on the candle a quick pass over the fire melts a tiny portion of the wax over it. Masking the four from view.
when i saw the title, i thought it said "candies" instead of "candles" and when she started melting the wax i was very confused, so... you should totally make candies next!
I just recently found a method for making candles using vegetable shortening like Crisco. I bought the Walmart brand. (Just make sure you buy all vegetable shortening and not a vegetable blend.) Melt the shortening in a glass pyrex measuring cup (the kind that has a pouring spout on it) in the microwave on a lower heat setting. You don't have to keep it in the microwave until fully melted, It will continue to melt as you stir it. Using votive candle holders, pour the melted shortening into them until they are about a half inch from the brim. Let them cool and harden completely. Stick a birthday candle into the center of each. Doesn't matter if they are colored or not. You won't see the color as they burn. You can also use taper candles with a ball glass canning jar. Just cut the candle (from the bottom using a sharp knife and scissors to cut through the string. Measure the taper candle so that the wick on the top comes just to the rim of the jar. Fill the jars until about an inch from the top. Same thing, just stick the taper candle in the cooled, hardened shortening right down the middle. Just the wick should be sticking out of the shortening. It has no smell and burns a very long time.
Everything you do is with thought and intent. These days is so easy to go through the motions without thinking. I'm going to try and slow down and use your teaching of thought and intent. I know this way I'll live a better life! 😇🌸
The amount of work they had to do in those days for things we don’t think twice about now. Much respect to all the housewives who laboured from dawn to dark behind the scenes for their families ❤
My daughters and I live like in the days of the Early Settlers. We find it as a preparedness for up and coming days ahead. I was buying lots of candles every month, until the tornadoes collapsed the candle factory in Kentucky (candles were difficult to find), and so we found the same candle tin mold you have at Lehman's. Threading the wick seems a bit tricky, so, alas, we are awaiting a wicking needle in the mail. Thank you for your patience, teaching, and knowledge. ❤️-A little flower in a big field
Times back then might of been harder because more work was required to obtain anything ,but i believe hard work keeps the mind clear and with purpose....the exact opposite of life today
I ABSOLUTELY love this channel. It's so peaceful. Even though my people were enslaved during this time in history, it's still nice to learn of history during that time.
Before I found a vintage candle mold at a flea market, I made my candles solely by "wick dipping"...its a long&tedious process, but also very fulfilling at the end!! 😊 Love your Channel, and Ron's too! 🖒🖒💕
@@audm.5946 I also daydream about having to live in those times, but I think it would be hard work. I like being able to choose to recreate a craft or chore when I am in the mood and in these times. I like to use my machines - washer, dryer, etc. to do my tasks, and then I have time to play with baking, making candies, embroidery, lace-making, soap-making... Much more fun when I don't HAVE to make something.
You all should look to see if there is a Living Museum in your area. Old World Wisconsin was always looking for people to work as reenactment actors. That would be a fun summer job.
There’s a big one on the west side of Des Moines Iowa, on the north side of Indianapolis Indiana, Carriage Hill at Dayton Ohio, Johnston Farm at Piqua Ohio, another one at Zoar Ohio, and so many others all across the country where I have stopped on my travels! They all have special events at different times of the year, and they are well worth spending 1-2 days in the area. ♥️🌻🕯
I love watching how the simple things we take for granted are done with ease, even tho it's really hard. Justine you make it look so easy. Love the videos.
Once again another interesting video to watch. The convenience that we have today just going to a store and buying a candle even if it's for a dollar or more. But just think of all the hard work that people back in the day went through just so that they could light a candle for a nice dinner or a holiday or just to have light in a dark room. Thank you for doing these videos. ☺️☺️
Justine mentioned homemade soap if tallow and ash in one of the videos. "A working woman's usual morning routine" (or a title close to that). She didn't say if she made it, but I also wonder.
Old timers put hardwood ash in a bowl with a very small hole that very slowly drained into another bowl. This gave the ash had time to leech into the water and make a lye solution. If I am not mistaken the water was run through the ash twice to increase the strength.
@@jocarson5310: Yes, that is how my grandma and great grandma did it. Eventually, I think by the 60s they just bought lye at the grocery or hardware store because they were such busy farmers and it was much quicker, not to mention safer with lots of little grandchildren always underfoot. At butchering time we’d save that good hard white flaky beef & sheep fat for soap making. Grandma would usually make three varieties of lye soap: plain, oatmeal and lavender. She made gigantic amounts, several thousand bars at a time, and then it didn’t need to be made every year. After it had cured she distributed among her seven children and their families in large old shoeboxes and boot boxes. It seemed to keep forever! If you got low on funds, you could grate it and use it for laundry or dish soap! I remember if we were going to use it this way, we would grate it and then blend it into a hot bowl of water with a whisk until it was all dissolved and sudsy, and then use that to mix into the laundry tub or the sink of dishes.
Because candle frames are expensive, they can be sold at high prices. Candles made pretty in molds are mostly made of beeswax. The quality is so good that it can be used even today. Beeswax candles have a uniform shape with less soot and a nice smell. Skilled artisans also added color to the candles or molded them into a variety of interesting shapes. Of course, poor citizens mainly used cheap dipped tallow candles, except for special occasions.
I have been at re enactments and living history museums where making candles was a participatable activity. The kids always have fun, even when their candle does not look like a candle.
I love American history. Particularly 18th and early to mid 19th century. I've been wanting to make beeswax candles for awhile and this was cool to see. I knew about the dipping method but wasn't aware there was a pouring method of the era. Very cool to learn something knew. Also I subscribed
Love this. I want to try. Wondering how you managed to get the two candles who's wicks broke off the bamboo stick out of the mold. I'm sure this is something that will happen to me. ERG! lol.. Love your videos. They are always so peaceful and takes me back to a simple time! Thank you!
Perfect English... you should be proud! There are people born here that don't know how to put a sentence together the way that you did! (I'm being 100% serious.)
There is a lot of work involved in making beeswax candles . We can not forget the bees for making the wax to begin with . The process from the hive to the candleholder is a busy one .
@@islandgal500: Beeswax can be expensive, and I have not had good success with having them come out unbroken from the mold. Also I have arthritis and using the mold has become challenging and even dangerous for me. I have cut myself badly a few times. I much prefer dipping, but do dip in a different method than she does. We use a circular form with slots around the edge. So I have 1 disc on each hand, held by a central loop, and 10 tapers are slid onto each disc into the slots. A knot at the top of each taper holds them in place, and this way I can dip 20 tapers at a time. It is quite fast, and much less stress on my hands. We have beginner or starter thin tapers, and we dip, then we walk around the room and dip again and proceed until it is the size we wish, the size that fits our candlesticks. If our room is too warm and the candle doesn’t cool down enough between dips, it may begin to melt wax off! In that case we take a walk around the house outside between dips to cool the candle down. It really doesn’t take very long, and when you can do 20 at a time, you can get quite a lot done in one day!
If you’re making candles at home, I recommend melting the wax in a double boiler (a pan of wax in a pan of hot water). If you put a pot of straight wax directly over the fire, not only can you scorch the wax, but it can catch fire, which can be very dangerous.
I once took a string off of a dog food bag and some duct tape and taped the strings to a split bamboo. The bamboo was 5" inches long and i split it in half and put a little bit of cooking oil on the inside and melted some leftover candle wax that I had been saving from old candles and poured it into the two halves of bamboo and let it cool and harden and then slowly pull it out. It looked like a half moon shape everybody was asking me where I got them when I told them that I made it they laughed at me and didn't believe me. Someone threw the bamboo away when I was moving.
Thanks, Respect, & Admiration of your passion for the old paths & good ways that hath bourne us hitherto. You are a type of priest/ priestess for diligently studying, and combining that knowledge with wisdom to remind all who ask about the old paths & good way. If I may, with all Respect, commend you on your fine complexion and blemish-free skin. Spending time properly attired has, no doubt, nurtured this healthy fairness, along with a good diet.
I would love to make candles and use them in my home. BUT, I have little ones and my 3 year old in particular is really rambunctious, basically a tiny cave man. I'll wait a few years. It might be a fun idea to make tiny hand made birthday cake candles. Some of the store bought ones have a bad smell.
Hello! I loved this video, will definitely be making these :) could you please make a video on children’s 19th century night routine? I know you made a night routine a while ago but how different would it be depending on age? It’s ok if not I was just wondering. Have a nice day ♥️
Justine, you should try hand modelling as a side gig; there is such a thing where they need people with pretty hands for commercials, etc. Gosh you've got the most beautiful hands! In the 18th century you'd have been a dairy maid! =)
I have been thinking of making tallow candles. I render tallow from ground beef. I'm getting quite a lot of it. I realize it isn't exactly the same as tallow rendered from suet. Would it still make good candles?
I think the scorched candles would probably work but they might smoke more. Unscorched beeswax has a clean burn and nice smell. I'm not willing to burn my beeswax to find out. 😀
All you have to do is tie weights to the bottom of the wicks and they'll dry straight. Also a larger and taller pot so you can dip them both at the same time.
Wouldn't it be more efficient to dip both sides of the wick at the same time? What you've made is still beautiful. I've just seen a lot of methods that dip several candles at once while they hang on a stick or length of wood so they stay as straight as possible
That’s what I do. Actually we have round discs with a large “eye” screw for my finger to go thru, and around the edges of the discs are slots cut just large enough for the string to slide in, and the beginning taper has a knot at the top which keeps it in place. So we pre-dip those measured pieces of string into beginner tapers of the right length. Then they are heavy enough to keep themselves straight and not run into each other. This way we can dip 10 tapers at a time per disc. If I use 2discs at a time that’s 20 candles! I prefer to use beeswax candles in the winter, and I like to give them as gifts. In case you are wondering, the discs are made of thick plastic, maybe a quarter inch thick, which dried wax can easily be cleaned off of. If you wanted to be more authentic to the period, I suppose you could use some type of sanded hardwood such as Walnut or Hickory.
to avoid holes forming in the wax when pouring in molds, u need to let the wax cool a bit before pouring. i dont remember the exact temperature, but its when a skin starts to form on the surface of the wax. thats when using a double boiling method (bowl with water being heated, not the pot wax directly). waiting to see a skin form might not work with larger quantities of wax. a thermometer should be used in that case. not very old fashioned. perhaps try double boiling instead with a small soup pot-sized quantity of wax, and see whether holes form
You would have had candles made of either tallow or beeswax. Beeswax was the preferred material because tallow burns black and can even leave a residue on your walls.
In addition, tallow candles smell *awful*!
Was it extremely expensive at this time period for beeswax? I know it was during the medieval period.
I have some questions. Would they have reserve the mug used to pour the molded candles exclusively for this task alone? How would you scrub all the wax out of the cooking pot? Im sure that a cooking pot like that wasnt used exclusively for melting wax (I could be wrong though). How much would a candle sell for? Would it be typical for the Lady and Lord of the house to allow their cook to create candles for profit for themselves?
@@alyceweirick3916 I was wondering that myself. Dipping candles takes so much wax. It would be tempting to leave it in the pot. But on the other hand pots were super expensive.
wow it really turn out amazing
I'm a beeswax candle maker, I use modern tools but the method is still the same all these years later. Every time I make my candles I feel connected to the past. 💛
There are so many reasons that I adore this channel. I just realized that one reason, I think, is that the narration is minimal and realistic, as if we are watching. Many channels have hosts who talk endlessly, and they don’t always have any knowledge. I enjoy hearing you both talk, but I learn from watching and reading the subtitles. I’m sitting by my own fire right now, marveling at all the cooking you do. Thanks for all the hard work you all put into these videos.
I agree. It is like ASMR
Agreed Ronda.
I agree
Je suis tout à fait d accord
I couldn't agree more! I have sensory issues and too much sound and talking is very overwhelming and overloading to me. This channel is quite enjoyable and I love the captions and interaction when there is. Lol. Many times I find myself chuckling because I can follow along much better and catch the humor in a lot of the videos and details as well.
When I was little,we had a school field trip about the days of old and we made candles. We would form a line and we each had a wick and we would go to the pot of hot wax and dip our wick in and go around to the back of the line and do it again until we had a nice candle. It was so fun and to me is the best way to do it!
You can make the dipped candles straight by tying a small weight like a metal nut onto the bottoms of the wicks. After enough dips that the candles are stiff, you can cut off the weights and heat them up to reclaim the wax.
Great tip!
Is that so?
You can also dip them in cold water between dips to harden the wax before the next immersion.
I liked the dip method of making candles, best! They may look a bit crooked, but it gives the candles Character! Many years ago, I made dolls' house sized candles using that dip method. They turned out beautifully! It was fun to make miniature candles using the dip method. I love these videos, and learn a lot about the "good old days"!
~Janet in Canada
I discovered your channel randomly when I was searching for some ideas for my story. As someone who dreams of being a housewife (that is if, the circumstances call for it), I find your videos to be a detox for the mind from this technology obsessed complex world. Subscribed 👍
I, too, wish to be a housewife!!!
I would never wish to be a housewife it seems so boring. Besides i make my own 💰 and live independently.. but this channel is GOLD. So relaxing.
@@Iceis_Phoenix oh my it's never boring. Slow paced sometimes but never boring. Just keep learning new things and it keeps life at home fun.
@@Iceis_Phoenix it's as interesting as you make it, being a housewife means you are too busy to be bored 😊
@@Iceis_Phoenix I am a housewife. It’s by no means boring. I am a mom of 3, whom I homeschool. I run and manage the house. I also make extra money by doing side hobbies. It’s not for everybody, but trust when I say it’s not boring. I’m so busy that I seldom have time to just relax unless it’s late at night. (Such as right now, as I wait up for my husband who will be home within the hour, it’s past midnight currently.)
I roleplay as a hobby and I find channels like this so informative for helping me learn the historical low-tech stuff for my writing. I really like this channel's simple no fuss no frills approach.
Bees wax candles smell amazing too!
Lovely! Imagine living and working in that era. Ah, time travel. Thanks for the tutorial.
This is like going back in time! Thanks for doing these videos!
I make candles using the dip method, yet after each dip in the wax I dip in tap water just repeat dip wax, dip water, ...... I do have a mold as well, but have not used it yet. Making candles is a very soothing project. So much enjoyment in each video, thank you for doing them. In Joy
It is not necessary to dip in cold water, as long as the candle has time to cool down between repeated dippings. Moisture on the candle surface can actually lead to a bumpy candle surface, But perhaps that is what you want? In my family, if we need to cool the candles down more than just a couple laps walking around the room will achieve, then we take a walk around the house outdoors in the cooler air between our dips. This is always sufficient, but then again we make our candles in the fall and winter when it is cool outside.
I love how every single mouvement She makes it's full of love and grace
My word, the moulds are really fiddly! I do prefer the dipping method. Unless you want posh dinner candles, a candle is a candle and gives off exactly the same light. Wonderful to watch in this crazy fast-paced world of ours.
A trick to free the candles from the molds easier is that after a few uses the molds will have a slight layer of wax left in them. Being like butter in a cake pan giving them a light dusting with flour before pouring helps to free the candle from the mold. If there's any leftover flour on the candle a quick pass over the fire melts a tiny portion of the wax over it. Masking the four from view.
when i saw the title, i thought it said "candies" instead of "candles" and when she started melting the wax i was very confused, so... you should totally make candies next!
Same here!!
Me too 🌚
Lol
Focus people focus. F o c u s
Me too lol 😂
I just recently found a method for making candles using vegetable shortening like Crisco. I bought the Walmart brand. (Just make sure you buy all vegetable shortening and not a vegetable blend.)
Melt the shortening in a glass pyrex measuring cup (the kind that has a pouring spout on it) in the microwave on a lower heat setting. You don't have to keep it in the microwave until fully melted, It will continue to melt as you stir it.
Using votive candle holders, pour the melted shortening into them until they are about a half inch from the brim. Let them cool and harden completely.
Stick a birthday candle into the center of each. Doesn't matter if they are colored or not. You won't see the color as they burn.
You can also use taper candles with a ball glass canning jar. Just cut the candle (from the bottom using a sharp knife and scissors to cut through the string. Measure the taper candle so that the wick on the top comes just to the rim of the jar. Fill the jars until about an inch from the top. Same thing, just stick the taper candle in the cooled, hardened shortening right down the middle. Just the wick should be sticking out of the shortening.
It has no smell and burns a very long time.
Everything you do is with thought and intent. These days is so easy to go through the motions without thinking. I'm going to try and slow down and use your teaching of thought and intent. I know this way I'll live a better life! 😇🌸
Beeswax candles cost a fortune but they are so worth it. They are non toxic and burn very slowly.
The amount of work they had to do in those days for things we don’t think twice about now. Much respect to all the housewives who laboured from dawn to dark behind the scenes for their families ❤
My daughters and I live like in the days of the Early Settlers. We find it as a preparedness for up and coming days ahead.
I was buying lots of candles every month, until the tornadoes collapsed the candle factory in Kentucky (candles were difficult to find), and so we found the same candle tin mold you have at Lehman's.
Threading the wick seems a bit tricky, so, alas, we are awaiting a wicking needle in the mail.
Thank you for your patience, teaching, and knowledge.
❤️-A little flower in a big field
Times back then might of been harder because more work was required to obtain anything ,but i believe hard work keeps the mind clear and with purpose....the exact opposite of life today
Does anybody else watch these videos for an ASMR effect? They are so relaxing to me!! 💤
Yep, I sure do!
I have even as a kid been fascinated with candlemaking, not sure why, but I have. That and candle clocks, which is a whole different adventure.
I ABSOLUTELY love this channel. It's so peaceful. Even though my people were enslaved during this time in history, it's still nice to learn of history during that time.
i like your lifestyle and your used old items, thanks for sharing this beautifulness with us...
whenever i get the notification i become so much happier
Before I found a vintage candle mold at a flea market, I made my candles solely by "wick dipping"...its a long&tedious process, but also very fulfilling at the end!! 😊 Love your Channel, and Ron's too! 🖒🖒💕
Nice watching, attractive surroundings around candle stands,viz smiling portrait & flowers vase.Thanks
So Happy I randomly came across your channel. My favorite by far! The only one I’ll stop everything for just to watch! 💗
The hinge system for the pot in the fireplace is very cool, wish I had one for my modern fireplace lol.
This channel is far better than wonderful !
Oh my gosh I want to live there- you really capture the vibe!! 😄
Me too. I actually think I would have liked it. Who has a time machine?
@@audm.5946 i know right!
@@audm.5946 I also daydream about having to live in those times, but I think it would be hard work. I like being able to choose to recreate a craft or chore when I am in the mood and in these times. I like to use my machines - washer, dryer, etc. to do my tasks, and then I have time to play with baking, making candies, embroidery, lace-making, soap-making... Much more fun when I don't HAVE to make something.
You all should look to see if there is a Living Museum in your area. Old World Wisconsin was always looking for people to work as reenactment actors. That would be a fun summer job.
There’s a big one on the west side of Des Moines Iowa, on the north side of Indianapolis Indiana, Carriage Hill at Dayton Ohio, Johnston Farm at Piqua Ohio, another one at Zoar Ohio, and so many others all across the country where I have stopped on my travels! They all have special events at different times of the year, and they are well worth spending 1-2 days in the area. ♥️🌻🕯
Mozart! Educational, peaceful, and beautiful.
I can remember making homemade candles with my mother's supervision of course, so much fun and interesting, brings back memories ❤❤❤
I love watching how the simple things we take for granted are done with ease, even tho it's really hard.
Justine you make it look so easy.
Love the videos.
Once again another interesting video to watch. The convenience that we have today just going to a store and buying a candle even if it's for a dollar or more. But just think of all the hard work that people back in the day went through just so that they could light a candle for a nice dinner or a holiday or just to have light in a dark room. Thank you for doing these videos. ☺️☺️
I am a soap maker. Have you done a video on making old fashioned soap? They used tallow and ash I believe. Would be cool to see if you’ve not done it!
Justine mentioned homemade soap if tallow and ash in one of the videos. "A working woman's usual morning routine" (or a title close to that). She didn't say if she made it, but I also wonder.
Old timers put hardwood ash in a bowl with a very small hole that very slowly drained into another bowl. This gave the ash had time to leech into the water and make a lye solution. If I am not mistaken the water was run through the ash twice to increase the strength.
@@jocarson5310: Yes, that is how my grandma and great grandma did it. Eventually, I think by the 60s they just bought lye at the grocery or hardware store because they were such busy farmers and it was much quicker, not to mention safer with lots of little grandchildren always underfoot.
At butchering time we’d save that good hard white flaky beef & sheep fat for soap making. Grandma would usually make three varieties of lye soap: plain, oatmeal and lavender. She made gigantic amounts, several thousand bars at a time, and then it didn’t need to be made every year. After it had cured she distributed among her seven children and their families in large old shoeboxes and boot boxes. It seemed to keep forever! If you got low on funds, you could grate it and use it for laundry or dish soap! I remember if we were going to use it this way, we would grate it and then blend it into a hot bowl of water with a whisk until it was all dissolved and sudsy, and then use that to mix into the laundry tub or the sink of dishes.
I enjoy candle making. I tried the dipping method when I was in Middle School.
The candles look great!
Verry good teaching.I have learned something. I will keep on watching. David Back from Menifee county Kentucky,
Because candle frames are expensive, they can be sold at high prices.
Candles made pretty in molds are mostly made of beeswax. The quality is so good that it can be used even today. Beeswax candles have a uniform shape with less soot and a nice smell.
Skilled artisans also added color to the candles or molded them into a variety of interesting shapes. Of course, poor citizens mainly used cheap dipped tallow candles, except for special occasions.
Beautiful video, I collect candles, old and new, books about candles. This video is fantastic for me
I have been at re enactments and living history museums where making candles was a participatable activity. The kids always have fun, even when their candle does not look like a candle.
I love American history. Particularly 18th and early to mid 19th century. I've been wanting to make beeswax candles for awhile and this was cool to see. I knew about the dipping method but wasn't aware there was a pouring method of the era. Very cool to learn something knew. Also I subscribed
Love this. I want to try. Wondering how you managed to get the two candles who's wicks broke off the bamboo stick out of the mold. I'm sure this is something that will happen to me. ERG! lol.. Love your videos. They are always so peaceful and takes me back to a simple time! Thank you!
I want to live the similar life style with my man❤️
So relaxing to watch. They are adorable!
The music is wonderful,i Will try to do like this.
The mantle caught my eye. Nicely constructed. Cool vids.
Very beautiful. Thanks for sharing.
I love your channel and even though I don't speak English very well I encourage you with the comments, very good video
Perfect English... you should be proud!
There are people born here that don't know how to put a sentence together the way that you did!
(I'm being 100% serious.)
I did Bee wax Candle dipping one time. It was fun! It smell great and I stay have it somewhere in my house. :)
Hello! Wonderful video. I would like to know if one could use used oil to make candles. Would they last longer or shorter? Thank you!
There is a lot of work involved in making beeswax candles . We can not forget the bees for making the wax to begin with . The process from the hive to the candleholder is a busy one .
I love how nowadays people soften store bought candles to reform them while then they made candles from scratch😮
Absolutely love it. I think mold method is easier:)
Exactly what I thought before, during, and after watching. I'd rather pour than keep dipping, and dipping, and dipping.
@@islandgal500: Beeswax can be expensive, and I have not had good success with having them come out unbroken from the mold. Also I have arthritis and using the mold has become challenging and even dangerous for me. I have cut myself badly a few times.
I much prefer dipping, but do dip in a different method than she does. We use a circular form with slots around the edge. So I have 1 disc on each hand, held by a central loop, and 10 tapers are slid onto each disc into the slots. A knot at the top of each taper holds them in place, and this way I can dip 20 tapers at a time. It is quite fast, and much less stress on my hands. We have beginner or starter thin tapers, and we dip, then we walk around the room and dip again and proceed until it is the size we wish, the size that fits our candlesticks. If our room is too warm and the candle doesn’t cool down enough between dips, it may begin to melt wax off! In that case we take a walk around the house outside between dips to cool the candle down. It really doesn’t take very long, and when you can do 20 at a time, you can get quite a lot done in one day!
@@salyluz6535 Good to know another perspective and why. Thanks.
Just the right amount of background music! And I like the subtitles too!
If you’re making candles at home, I recommend melting the wax in a double boiler (a pan of wax in a pan of hot water). If you put a pot of straight wax directly over the fire, not only can you scorch the wax, but it can catch fire, which can be very dangerous.
Well, those molded candles are straight, but the hand dipped method looks more fun.
You gave him a heck of a nice free bowl with his candles 🙂
I once took a string off of a dog food bag and some duct tape and taped the strings to a split bamboo. The bamboo was 5" inches long and i split it in half and put a little bit of cooking oil on the inside and melted some leftover candle wax that I had been saving from old candles and poured it into the two halves of bamboo and let it cool and harden and then slowly pull it out. It looked like a half moon shape everybody was asking me where I got them when I told them that I made it they laughed at me and didn't believe me. Someone threw the bamboo away when I was moving.
That's very creative! I love it. Too bad it got thrown away :(
Please make longer videos. I love them! From an English fan x
She is the village candlemaker. She should be making a good living.
Thank you for showing us how you do candles.
I love the music. It reminds me of my childhood.
I thought you made the candle molds look SO easy!!!!
🔥 🕯 🪄
I love beeswax candles they can actually cleanse the air. 🌬
Seriously, I've learned more about history through Google and UA-cam, than I ever did in elementary and high school.
Same
Thanks, Respect, & Admiration of your passion for the old paths & good ways that hath bourne us hitherto.
You are a type of priest/ priestess for diligently studying, and combining that knowledge with wisdom to remind all who ask about the old paths & good way.
If I may, with all Respect, commend you on your fine complexion and blemish-free skin. Spending time properly attired has, no doubt, nurtured this healthy fairness, along with a good diet.
Thanks for the good video. May Jesus continue to bless you and your family
I would love to make candles and use them in my home. BUT, I have little ones and my 3 year old in particular is really rambunctious, basically a tiny cave man. I'll wait a few years. It might be a fun idea to make tiny hand made birthday cake candles. Some of the store bought ones have a bad smell.
Hello! I loved this video, will definitely be making these :) could you please make a video on children’s 19th century night routine? I know you made a night routine a while ago but how different would it be depending on age? It’s ok if not I was just wondering. Have a nice day ♥️
Hi, fantastic. Can you please tell me where you got that candle mould from. Blessed be.
I used to read
Back To Basics
By
Readers digest
To get this info.
NICE TO SEE IT
ENACTED!!
Justine, you should try hand modelling as a side gig; there is such a thing where they need people with pretty hands for commercials, etc. Gosh you've got the most beautiful hands! In the 18th century you'd have been a dairy maid! =)
Thank you Alex ^_^
@@EarlyAmerican :)
I have been thinking of making tallow candles. I render tallow from ground beef. I'm getting quite a lot of it. I realize it isn't exactly the same as tallow rendered from suet. Would it still make good candles?
We always used alligator clips with weights. It straightens the strings out and after a few dips you just remove the weight
Would the scorched candles still work- perhaps just not look (or smell) nice?
I think the scorched candles would probably work but they might smoke more. Unscorched beeswax has a clean burn and nice smell. I'm not willing to burn my beeswax to find out. 😀
How beautiful they are 😉😲🦋💞
Looks like Justine had a side hustle going on!👏👏✨️
People especially from once modern and rich states like new york and california want to go back to this lifestyle.
All you have to do is tie weights to the bottom of the wicks and they'll dry straight. Also a larger and taller pot so you can dip them both at the same time.
Excellent video. Thank you.
Would they ever color the candles? Or did they mostly leave them natural colour?
I made candles when I was younger!
To make them colored, did they put the colored powder in the wax?
Wouldn't it be more efficient to dip both sides of the wick at the same time? What you've made is still beautiful. I've just seen a lot of methods that dip several candles at once while they hang on a stick or length of wood so they stay as straight as possible
That’s what I do. Actually we have round discs with a large “eye” screw for my finger to go thru, and around the edges of the discs are slots cut just large enough for the string to slide in, and the beginning taper has a knot at the top which keeps it in place. So we pre-dip those measured pieces of string into beginner tapers of the right length. Then they are heavy enough to keep themselves straight and not run into each other. This way we can dip 10 tapers at a time per disc. If I use 2discs at a time that’s 20 candles! I prefer to use beeswax candles in the winter, and I like to give them as gifts. In case you are wondering, the discs are made of thick plastic, maybe a quarter inch thick, which dried wax can easily be cleaned off of. If you wanted to be more authentic to the period, I suppose you could use some type of sanded hardwood such as Walnut or Hickory.
Wow I've never done this before but the first method to me seems alot let tedious so more easier great video
to avoid holes forming in the wax when pouring in molds, u need to let the wax cool a bit before pouring. i dont remember the exact temperature, but its when a skin starts to form on the surface of the wax. thats when using a double boiling method (bowl with water being heated, not the pot wax directly). waiting to see a skin form might not work with larger quantities of wax. a thermometer should be used in that case. not very old fashioned. perhaps try double boiling instead with a small soup pot-sized quantity of wax, and see whether holes form
Glad I found this. Do y'all have a fb page by any chance? I'm into this time period
I loved this video so much 🍓🦋💗
It made my day!
Love fireplace.
Did you harvest your own wax?
Lovely to watch. As always.
Thank you for this wonderful video ❤
Back in those days did women’s dresses catch alight? I hold my breath every time you go near the fire.
I am thinking about making my own Candles for my Home Altar.
When getting them out of the mold, is it difficult to get the stubborn ones out?
It so very relaxing and satisfying video . I really like the nail of this girl😊
I made candles when I was younger.