Learning Center

Candle Making Step by Step Guides

Empty glass tumbler and a wicked jar beside an aluminum pouring pot on rustic wood, with candles glowing behind and navy ribbon

Since 1999, we've answered the same question thousands of times: "How do I make this?" These guides are the written version of that answer. Each one covers a single project from materials list to finished product, with the exact temperatures, weights, and technique details we would give you over the phone. Supply links go directly to the products used in each project. Start with the candle projects, then explore further. The same wax, fragrance, and dye skills carry into freshies, decorating, and seasonal crafts throughout the rest of the page.

When Something Goes Sideways

Every guide carries its own troubleshooting, and three companion pages catch the rest: What You Should Know Before You Make Your First Candle sets expectations for a first batch, the Do's & Don'ts of Candle Making list collects the mistakes we see most, and the Glossary of Terms for Candle Making decodes the jargon (throw, cure, relief hole) the moment a guide uses it. If a candle still misbehaves, the candle making FAQ is the deep archive, and we're a phone call away.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the easiest candle to make for a beginner?

A container candle. The jar does the structural work a mold would, the wax forgives small temperature misses, and the supply list is short. Our container candle guide is written as a first project; most makers pour a usable candle on their first afternoon.

In what order should I learn candle making?

Learn wax prep first (measuring, melting, fragrance, color), then make container candles, in paraffin or soy. After a few jars, branch by interest: wooden wicks for the modern crackling look, wax melts for a no-wick product, then votives and pillars when you're ready for molds.

What supplies do I need to start making candles?

A container wax, jars, wicks, a fragrance oil, a pouring pot, a thermometer, and a digital scale cover the first project; dye is optional. Each guide's materials list links the individual supplies it uses, so you can stock exactly what the project calls for.

How long does it take to make a candle?

Plan on one to two hours of hands-on work for a first batch of container candles, plus overnight cooling. Then comes the patient part: about a week of curing before the first burn, which is when the wax finishes binding the fragrance and the candle reaches full scent throw.