Table of Contents
What does it mean to trim your wick?
Why Trim Candle Wicks When you trim wicks, you can expect your candles to provide more illumination. Trimming the wick allows the flame to have a clearer and brighter burn. Keeping wicks shorter also means your candles will have a cleaner burn. Some candles create a black, sooty residue when you burn them.
What does it mean to have your lamps trimmed?
In the days when light came from burning oil in lamps, a vessel at sea needed crewmen to constantly care for the lamps. This care involved trimming the wick, which drew the oil up from the storage reservoir, so that the flame would be clean and bright. A poorly trimmed wick creates a flame which is dim and smoky.
When should I trim my wick?
Keep the wick trimmed to 1/4 inch at all times. It is suggested to trim the wick every 4 hours of burn time. When wick trimming, you should always extinguish the flame, let the candle come to room temperature, and trim the wick before relighting.
What happens if you don’t Trim candle wicks?
Trimming the wicks will keep the candle burning without any black soot and it will give your candle a longer burn time. Here is what happens when you do not trim the wicks properly. When a wick gets too long it cannot draw wax all the way up to the top of the wick. Therefore, the wick itself will start to burn.
What do you do when your wick is too short?
Check out these useful tips for dealing with a short candle wick and making sure your candles always burn properly.
- Keeping a Candle Wick from Getting Too Short.
- Fixing a Short Candle Wick.
- What if the Wick is Too Long?
- Conclusion.
When should I trim my candle wick?
Should I trim candle wick before first?
So, back to WICKS…the first thing you should do when you buy our candles or any other, is trim the wick before first burn. Trim it about 1/8″ above the surface of the wax. It gives the wax time to melt so the burn pool reaches the sides of the glass. After burning, blow out the candle and let it cool.
What is the meaning of wicks for oil lamps?
: a bundle of fibers or a loosely twisted, braided, or woven cord, tape, or tube usually of soft spun cotton threads that by capillary attraction draws up to be burned a steady supply of the oil in lamps or the melted tallow or wax in candles.