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Fall Fragrance Recipes for Candles

Fall is the season makers reach for spice, orchard fruit, bakery sweetness, and woodsmoke. Here are tested fall blend recipes built from our own fragrance oils, plus how to mix and test a seasonal scent of your own.

Soy candles in blue, amber, sage and cream jars among pumpkins, autumn leaves, and a pecan pie slice

Fall is the season makers reach for warm spice, orchard fruit, bakery sweetness, and the smell of woodsmoke. The recipes below are tested starting points built from our own fragrance oils. Every blend links straight to the oils so you can match the recipe, and the method that follows shows how to mix and test a fall scent of your own. For other themes and seasons, start with our full collection of fragrance recipes.

These are fragrance oil recipes, not essential oil recipes. Fragrance oils are formulated to hold up to the heat of melted wax, where most essential oils fade or degrade. Each oil below lists its notes, flash point, and recommended load on its product page.

Tested Fall Blend Recipes

Each recipe gives the oils and a starting ratio. Ratios are by weight, and the total fragrance used should stay within your wax's recommended load. Treat them as a starting point: pour a single test candle, judge it by its hot throw after a cure, and adjust the ratio before you scale a recipe up.

Six Fall Blends to Pour

Autumn Breeze

1 part Patchouli, 2 parts Orange, & 2 parts Clove

Pumpkin Cake Roll

1 part Pumpkin Souffle & 2 parts Buttercream (type)

Pumpkin Snickerdoodle

1 part Snickerdoodle & 1 part Pumpkin Pie Spice

Apple Pickin'

2 parts Oakmoss & 1 part Macintosh Apple

The Woodlands

1 part Ranch Hand & 1 part Leaves (type)

Harvest Moon

1 part Leaves (type) & 1 part Pomegranate

How to Blend and Test a Fall Scent

Building your own seasonal blend is one of the most satisfying ways to get creative with fragrance. Work in small trials first so you can adjust the blend before committing it to a batch of wax.

Mix and Test a Custom Fall Blend

  1. 1

    Pick a dominant note and a supporting note

    Choose a dominant fall note, such as apple, pumpkin, cider, or caramel, then pick one or two oils to support it. Pairing a sweet or fruity dominant note with a warm spice or a woody base keeps a fall scent from going flat.

  2. 2

    Set a starting ratio

    Begin with about 2 parts of the dominant oil to 1 part of each supporting oil. Stronger fragrances, such as oakmoss, cedar, or vanilla, can often be used more sparingly without losing their presence in the blend.

  3. 3

    Trial on Q-tips

    Dip a separate Q-tip in each oil at your ratio and seal them together in a small jar. Let them sit at least an hour, then open and smell. To push one scent forward, add another Q-tip of it and re-test. Write down the ratio every time so you can reproduce it.

  4. 4

    Pour a test candle

    Once a Q-tip blend smells right, measure the oils by weight, add them to wax at about 180°F, stir two full minutes, and pour one test candle. Cure it about a week, then burn it and judge the blend by its hot throw, adjusting the ratio before you scale up.

For more on balancing the three note levels and choosing a scent family, see our scent guide.

Fall Scent Families

Most fall fragrances fall into a handful of groups. Knowing which group an oil sits in makes it far easier to pair two oils that complement each other instead of clashing. Use this as a reference when you build your own blend.

The Fall Scent Families

FamilyCharacterTypical notesRole in a blend
Warm SpiceBold, seasonal, cozyCinnamon, clove, nutmeg, chaiHeart note; the signature of fall
Orchard FruitCrisp, bright, familiarApple, pear, cranberry, figTop note that lifts a heavy base
Bakery & GourmandSweet, edible, comfortingCaramel, brown sugar, vanilla, pecanBase or heart; rich and warming
Woods & EarthDry, grounding, smokyOakmoss, cedar, firewood, patchouliBase note that anchors and lingers

A good fall candle usually draws from two of these: a bright orchard or sweet top to open, and a spice or woody base to give it depth. Browse the full range of fragrance oils by category, each with its flash point, recommended load, and gel and skincare compatibility.

Loading and Curing Fall Candles

Spice and bakery oils reward a proper load and cure, since their depth comes through most once the wax has had time to bind the fragrance.

Each oil's IFRA Certificate lists its maximum usage level for each application, and real-world usage also depends on the wax or base it goes into. The product page also lists the flash point, the temperature at which an oil can ignite if exposed to a spark or open flame. It is safe to add a fragrance to melted wax above its flash point; keep the oil itself a safe distance from any open flame.

More Seasonal Recipes

Fall blends are just one part of our fragrance recipe collection. For the spooky side of the season, see our Halloween Fragrance Recipes. For winter, spring, and summer recipes, plus leather, gourmand, and other themed blends, browse our full collection of fragrance recipes.

Frequently Asked Questions

What fragrance oils make good fall candles?

Fall candles lean on four scent groups: warm spice (cinnamon, clove, nutmeg), orchard fruit (apple, pear, cranberry), bakery sweetness (caramel, brown sugar, vanilla, pecan), and woods and earth (oakmoss, cedar, firewood, patchouli). A balanced fall blend usually pairs one of these with another, like apple with spice or caramel with a woody base. Every Lone Star fragrance oil lists its notes on the product page so you can see how two oils will combine.

Can I mix two fragrance oils together in one candle?

Yes. Blending two to four fragrance oils is how you build a scent that is yours alone. Measure the oils by weight, keep the total within your wax's recommended fragrance load, and test the blend on Q-tips before committing a batch of wax. Anchor the blend with a heavier base note and lift it with a brighter top note so it has both staying power and a good first impression.

How much fragrance oil do I use in a fall candle?

Use your wax's recommended fragrance load, which is usually around 6 to 10 percent by weight depending on the wax. You can load up to that maximum, but never past it: the wax retains only so much fragrance oil, and any excess separates from the wax instead of adding throw. Add the oil at about 180°F, stir for two full minutes, and cure the candle about a week before the first burn.

Are these fall recipes for fragrance oils or essential oils?

These recipes use fragrance oils, which are formulated for candle making and hold up to the heat of melted wax. Essential oils are a different product and often degrade or fade in a candle. Lone Star carries fragrance oils built for candles and other products, each with a listed flash point and recommended load.

How do I make my own fall candle scent?

Pick a sweet, fruity, or spice dominant fragrance, then choose one or two supporting oils. Trial the ratio on Q-tips before you pour: dip a separate Q-tip in each oil, seal them in a small jar for an hour, then smell. Once the blend reads right, measure the oils by weight, keep the total within your wax's recommended fragrance load, add at about 180°F, and cure a test candle about a week before judging it by hot throw.