Thursday, April 8, 2010
what is that, you say? IT'S A NEW SCENT OF THE DAY?!
And how else would we start but with a new scent of the day?
Storm Watch
description from the Yankee Candle web site:
"A cleansing ocean air before the storm."
While this candle does not quite smell like a storm, the scent is quite reminiscent (language!) of a warm summer night. While it is strong and has a bit of a floral/perfume scent, don't let that deter you. It is just the right amount of scent, and it's the perfect candle to burn while hanging out on your porch during a breezy summer night. But if you leave it unattended and your house goes up in flames, that's on you, my friend, and hopefully your roommate who lives in the attic has a collapsible fire escape.
Tuesday, November 20, 2007
burn for me, scented candle!
don't dismay. it's the scent of the day!
Christmas Cookie
description from the Yankee Candle web site:
"Buttery rich, vanilla scented, holiday sugar cookies."
Ok, friends, have you ever wanted to eat a candle? Because, let me reassure you, you are not alone. This candle has caused many a person to carefully debate the pros and cons of licking wax. This candle not only smells like amazing sugar cookies, but after awhile, if you are sleep-deprived enough, it starts to look like one. Burn with caution.
without the flame, there's no fire
I put a picture of it below, only that you might stay far, far away from it. If you are my friend and you buy it, I promise I will judge you.
Stupid candle warmers, sucking the joy out of life.
eight crazy nights
But I think the coolest religious candle deal has to be Hannukah. They light not one, not two, but EIGHT candles over the course of the holiday, and the religious significance is pretty sweet.
here's the down-low about it from Wikipedia:
Hannukah, from the Hebrew word for "dedication" or "consecration", marks the re-dedication of the
So if you've never gotten a chance to experience the lighting of the Hannukah candles, get on it, my friend. It is not an experience to be missed.
Monday, November 19, 2007
trick or treat?
But wait? What is this? The stupid candles just re-lit themselves. Is this magic? Horrible crazy voo-doo? Karma? You put them out again, but they keep re-lighting. These. Stupid. Candles. Won't. Go. Out. Finally, you give in to the tears while your mom/dad/aunt sally quickly pluck the candles from your cake and throws them into a sink full of water.
As you sadly eat your cake (yellow cake with chocolate frosting, to be exact), you begin to wonder. What was up with those candles?
Well, my friends, I have a bit of truth for you. You have just been hoodwinked by one of the cruelest birthday tools known to man: trick candles, candles that manage to re-light themselves over and over and cause you to question your sanity.
How do these awful things work, you might wonder. Well, I did a little googling, and I got the chemistry low-down (a science that I passed with flying colors, thank you very much, but I am still going to let someone else explain it to you).
from howstuffworks.com:
The key thing about a normal candle that is important to a trick candle is the moment after you blow out the candle. Normally there is a burning ember in the wick that causes a ribbon of paraffin smoke to rise from the wick. That ember is hot enough to vaporize paraffin but it is not hot enough to ignite the paraffin vapor.
The key to a re-lighting candle, therefore, is to add something to the wick that the ember is hot enough to ignite. That way the ember can ignite this substance and the substance can then ignite the paraffin vapor. In the links below, the most common substance mentioned is magnesium. Magnesium is a metal, but it happens to burn (combine with oxygen to produce light and heat) rapidly at an ignition temperature as low as 800 degrees F (430 degrees C) (aluminum and iron both burn as well, but magnesium lights at a lower temperature).
Inside the burning wick, the magnesium is shielded from oxygen and cooled by liquid paraffin, but once the flame goes out magnesium dust is ignited by the ember. If you watch the ember you will see tiny flecks of magnesium going off. One of them produces the heat necessary to re-light the paraffin vapor, and the candle flame comes back to life!
There you have it, my friends. And a word of advice. Next time someone puts trick candles on your cake, kick them in the shins. No one deserves that on their birthday.
great moments for candles in cinematic history
But what we are really interested in, my friends, is the INSANE amount of candles that exist throughout the movie. In fact, if it wasn't for these candles, the Phantom would be completely out of luck, because they a) totally set the creepy/romantic mood he always seems to be going for and b) illuminate his crazy underground lair (because the silly opera house didn't think of putting in outlets in the watery dungeon). In essence, without candles, the movie would be a complete bust.
So thank you, candles, for being a part of this movie. They definitely could not have done it without you.
So many candles! Glorious.