:INFO Why Beeswax Over Paraffin Beeswax burns cleaner than paraffin and emits a faint natural honey scent without synthetic fragrance. It has a higher melting point around 145 to 147 degrees F, which means a longer burn time and less dripping. It also naturally produces negative ions when burned, which may help neutralize airborne particles. The tradeoff is cost: beeswax is more expensive per pound, so most beginners start with small votive or taper batches to reduce waste while they dial in technique. :COUNTER.half 145 to 147 F | :COUNTER.half 35 to 45 Hours :PATH Choose and Prep Your Wick Wick size controls whether your candle tunnels or pools evenly. | :INFO Choose and Prep Your Wick Wick size controls whether your candle tunnels or pools evenly. For a 2-inch diameter container, use a cotton wick rated for that diameter (e.g. CD-16 or ECO-6). Pre-tab wicks by threading through a metal sustainer and crimping. Center the wick in the :PATH Melt the Wax Safely Use a double boiler: place wax in a dedicated pour pot, set it in a pot of | :INFO Melt the Wax Safely Use a double boiler: place wax in a dedicated pour pot, set it in a pot of simmering water. Never heat beeswax over direct flame. Monitor temperature with a candy or digital thermometer. Once melted and clear, remove from heat. Add fragrance oil (if :PATH Pour and Cool Pour slowly at 140 to 145 degrees F to minimize air bubbles. | :INFO Pour and Cool Pour slowly at 140 to 145 degrees F to minimize air bubbles. Fill to about half an inch below the rim. Allow to cool undisturbed at room temperature. Beeswax contracts as it cools and may produce a small sinkhole around the wick. Do a second pour at the :NOTE Adhesion and Frosting Pure beeswax can pull away slightly from glass container walls as it cools. This is cosmetic and does not affect burn quality. Warming the jar in the oven at 150 degrees F before pouring reduces the gap. Frosting (a white powdery surface) is also natural in beeswax and more common in yellow unfiltered wax. Filtered white beeswax produces a cleaner look with less frosting overall. :QUOTE [quotetype:personal] Beeswax does not forgive impatience. Pour too hot and you get bubbles. Pour too cold and you get drag lines. The sweet spot is narrow and worth finding.