A quality candle should last well beyond its first evening. Most candles burn shorter than their stated life not because of bad wax, but because of avoidable habits: skipping the first burn, forgetting to trim the wick, or burning the candle in a draught. The seven tips below apply to most candles, including both the decorative and glass vessel candles from K.Candles.

1. Get the First Burn Right

The first time you light a candle is the most important burn it will ever have. Wax has what is called "muscle memory" and it will follow the melt pool set on that first burn for every subsequent use.

Let the wax melt all the way to the edges of the container or the full diameter of the candle before extinguishing it. For most candles this takes two to three hours. If you cut the first burn short, the wax around the wick melts but the wax near the edges does not. On every future burn, the candle will tunnel down the centre, leaving a ring of un-melted wax around the sides. That wasted wax represents money and burn time lost.

2. Trim the Wick Before Every Burn

A wick that is too long produces a large, flickering flame that generates excess heat, burns through the wax too quickly, and deposits black soot on the glass or surrounding surfaces. Trim the wick to approximately 5mm before each use.

You can use a wick trimmer, small scissors, or even your fingernails on a cooled candle. The trim takes ten seconds and has a measurable effect on how cleanly and how long the candle burns. A properly trimmed wick produces a steady, upright flame roughly 2 to 2.5cm tall.

3. Keep Candles Away From Draughts

A candle placed near an open window, an air conditioner vent, or a ceiling fan will burn unevenly. The draught pushes the flame to one side, causing that side of the wax to melt faster. This leads to an uneven surface and, in glass vessels, can leave streaks of unmelted wax on the cooler side of the container.

Position candles on a stable, flat surface away from moving air. This also reduces the risk of the flame reaching any nearby fabric or flammable material.

4. Observe the Four-Hour Rule

Burning a candle for more than four hours at a time causes the wick to develop a "mushroom" of carbon at its tip, which increases soot and an unstable flame. It also allows the wax pool to become excessively deep and hot, which can stress the container or affect the fragrance load in the remaining wax.

Four hours is a practical maximum. After that, extinguish the candle, allow the wax to cool and fully solidify, and relight when you want to use it again. This cooling period also lets the glass or container return to room temperature before the next burn cycle.

5. Extinguish Properly

Blowing out a candle produces a stream of smoke and can send hot wax droplets onto the wick, making relighting harder. A candle snuffer or wick dipper is a better method: both extinguish the flame without creating smoke or disturbing the wax surface.

If you use a wick dipper, dip the burning wick into the melt pool to extinguish it, then straighten it upright before the wax sets. This coats the wick in wax and makes the next light much easier.

6. Store Candles Correctly

Candle wax is sensitive to heat, light, and humidity. If stored in a sunny spot or near a heat source, the wax can soften, warp (particularly for decorative sculptural candles), or discolour. Fragrances can also fade if the candle is exposed to direct sunlight over extended periods.

Store candles in a cool, dry place, ideally with the lid on (for glass vessels) or wrapped to protect the surface. Most candles are best kept below 25 degrees Celsius. Avoid storing them in the bathroom, where moisture and temperature fluctuations are common.

7. Know When to Stop

Every candle has a safe minimum wax level. For glass vessel candles, stop burning when approximately 1cm of wax remains at the bottom. Burning beyond this point allows the heat from the flame to reach the base of the container directly, which can overheat the glass or the surface the candle is resting on.

At K.Candles, the glass vessel candles are designed to be refillable once they reach this point. Clean out the remaining wax residue with warm water, and message us on WhatsApp to arrange a refill rather than disposing of the vessel.


A Quick Summary

  1. First burn: let the melt pool reach the full edge before extinguishing (2 to 3 hours).
  2. Wick trimming: trim to 5mm before every single burn.
  3. Draught: keep the candle away from open windows, fans, and vents.
  4. Burn time: four hours maximum per session; let the wax fully cool before relighting.
  5. Extinguishing: use a snuffer or wick dipper rather than blowing.
  6. Storage: cool, dry, away from direct sunlight; keep glass vessels lidded.
  7. End of life: stop at 1cm of remaining wax; refill glass vessels rather than discarding.

These habits apply to any candle, but they matter especially for quality handcrafted candles where the wax, fragrance, and finish have been carefully chosen. The difference between a candle that lasts 20 hours and one that lasts 35 hours is often just consistent care.

K.Candles are handcrafted in Cape Town with premium soy and paraffin wax. Decorative candles from R120, glass vessel candles from R220.

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