
Quinn Park
Joined 2024-09-15
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Why is my handmade soy candle tunneling?
Asked 1 day ago • 0 votes
✓ Accepted
84 votes
Answered 1 day ago
Short burns are the usual culprit. Candles form a burn memory, so if the first couple sessions do not reach the edges, they keep tunneling down the center. A draft nudges the flame off to one side, and an untrimmed wick can either mushroom or drown, both of which make the melt pool uneven. Soy needs a patient first burn to set itself up for success. You can still rescue the one you have. Trim the wick to about a quarter inch, move it out of the draft, and give it a long recovery burn until the melt pool reaches the sides. If the rim is stubborn, make a loose foil collar around the top to reflect heat back in, leaving a hole above the flame. You can also gently warm the high wax with a hair dryer to level it, then let it cool flat. While it is liquid, nudge a little of the ridge into the pool to help it catch up. For next time, use the hour per inch rule on the first burn, keep the wick trimmed before every light, avoid quick stop and start burns, and keep the jar away from vents or open windows. If you want a jar that resists tunneling a bit better, try Handmade Pottery Soy Candle set which uses a thicker pottery vessel that holds heat for a more even melt and natural soy wax.