I sell it in this sort of aluminium screw top tin .. looks good with a nice round label on the top ...Nice. I'll have to give it a go when I've got enough wax. Thanks
Awesome. Thanks for the advice. Do you sell on Facebook marketplace?I sell it in this sort of aluminium screw top tin .. looks good with a nice round label on the top ...
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Aluminum-Sopito-Containers-Candles-Cosmetics/dp/B08YK6Z6QC/ref=sr_1_17?crid=17DUCBQVXDU2F&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.Aec2dp4GrMP-EQFgC9D2IPu0qFZ1qyLt73l7M_fu1qEM-PkYufE1D7J9Oo-l-KTyVsnFG4odszrpWzEp8Tw2u7A7GPfYoH6APr-Zepl1kPeYlbhg7auaW3vLQZ4R-mfweS9IvFDpSVqXbSQi2KiitZVAFHxQI78PGmj_sF8LaelPd7__rm1kG5s9kQhFIWeCnQOl8VfMTIbWzvui7999OyX_dwj1hbH-lv0nIER_TTHq-w1FA4ZLLrzAzeSWnMLgVg64cqhKNfBnh5m1Ip97v1Gt0U9kfrMlPftg0hgH5gA.MPhpXMAHYXmX9eppj-oMFyNRBE-Ag4BgEIP5ZAzkbfI&dib_tag=se&keywords=small+screw+top+tins&nsdOptOutParam=true&qid=1727701845&sprefix=screw+top+tins,aps,103&sr=8-17&th=1
You just pour the melted polish straight in to the tin and let it set in the tin .. you can add a little lavender oil for a fragranced version or just leave it natural for a beeswax scent. There are lots of recipes about - you basically need a softening agent, as beeswax on it's own is too hard. There are variants that use chopping board oil, turpentine and boiled linseed oil - in various proportions - but don't use Linseed oil on its own with the beeswax as it tends to stay sticky for a long time. If you want a longer lasting shine you can also add a small percentage of Carnuba wax.
I use a Thorne's Easy steamer for steaming wax out of brood frames; and a Thorne's stainless steel Bain Marie for melting wax prior to moulding the blocks.Would be useful to specify the pan metal when treating beeswax, Peter. Years ago I found an old copper pan and the result was an awful disaster.
I meant in the pdf, which at 6 mentions 'an old saucepan' and later 'a jug' without mentioning that iron & copper will alter wax.stainless steel
I've used aluminium bain maries for the initial rendering and filtering of wax for years and it makes no difference to the wax.Aluminium crops up in the same debate but seems safe to use, though certainty is elusive.
Yes, your post in the link confirmed that it was OK; look further on the internet and the fog of conflicting opinion descends...I've used aluminium bain maries for the initial rendering and filtering of wax for years and it makes no difference to the wax.
it's like the old chestnut about aluminium cooking utensils causing dementia - no evidence at all of it being true.Yes, your post in the link confirmed that it was OK; look further on the internet and the fog of conflicting opinion descends...
I steam brood combs with no issue with a standard wallpaper steamer, but my brood frames and the box are smaller (box 144mm). It works brilliantly even in the roaring forties. Perhaps with the bigger box/frames you might need to use two steamer pipes? I would have thought wallpaper steamers are a common find over there as wallpaper seems to be! It's rife in the UKI found the Thorne's easisteam largely ineffective on brood comb, perhaps an indictment of just how dark and propolis I'd let them become but it barely melted 3 or 4 frames in the brood box I used, and even those were more collapsed than melted as such. Found it v frustrating and would take a lot of rerunning the steamer to get anything from it - I did it in my shed to conserve heat and deter bees - is there some hack I'm missing to make it more effective?
No ... I sell mostly to regular punters and through a retailer who is based in an antiques centre ...`can't fail if you can find somewhere selling antique furniture and wooden items. You are never going to retire on it but it gives you a better return than trading wax in for foundation.Awesome. Thanks for the advice. Do you sell on Facebook marketplace?
That's a very good exchange rate based on their foundation pricing. It would take a bit of work to realise an equivalent cash return on wax products.Just took 5 kg of not very well filtered wax to thornes and for forty extra quid got 200 sheets of wired shallow and 50 sheets of wired brood.
So much easier.
You can only exchange for their processed wax foundation and not the top quality stuff just so you know!That's a very good exchange rate based on their foundation pricing. It would take a bit of work to realise an equivalent cash return on wax products.
Still works out at an exceptional rate.You can only exchange for their processed wax foundation and not the top quality stuff just do you know!
even cheaper if you get unwired, so no wiring costThat's a very good exchange rate based on their foundation pricing. It would take a bit of work to realise an equivalent cash return on wax products.
By car or courier? Cost ought to be included in the deal price.just took ... 5 kg of not very well filtered wax to thorne
That's a very good exchange rate based on their foundation pricing. It would take a bit of work to realise an equivalent cash return on wax products.
Those tins look like the ones I get air rifle pellets in - also useful to keep a crown-of-thorns/Baldock cage in.I sell it in this sort of aluminium screw top tin .. looks good with a nice round label on the top ...
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Aluminum-Sopito-Containers-Candles-Cosmetics/dp/B08YK6Z6QC/ref=sr_1_17?crid=17DUCBQVXDU2F&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.Aec2dp4GrMP-EQFgC9D2IPu0qFZ1qyLt73l7M_fu1qEM-PkYufE1D7J9Oo-l-KTyVsnFG4odszrpWzEp8Tw2u7A7GPfYoH6APr-Zepl1kPeYlbhg7auaW3vLQZ4R-mfweS9IvFDpSVqXbSQi2KiitZVAFHxQI78PGmj_sF8LaelPd7__rm1kG5s9kQhFIWeCnQOl8VfMTIbWzvui7999OyX_dwj1hbH-lv0nIER_TTHq-w1FA4ZLLrzAzeSWnMLgVg64cqhKNfBnh5m1Ip97v1Gt0U9kfrMlPftg0hgH5gA.MPhpXMAHYXmX9eppj-oMFyNRBE-Ag4BgEIP5ZAzkbfI&dib_tag=se&keywords=small+screw+top+tins&nsdOptOutParam=true&qid=1727701845&sprefix=screw+top+tins,aps,103&sr=8-17&th=1
You just pour the melted polish straight in to the tin and let it set in the tin .. you can add a little lavender oil for a fragranced version or just leave it natural for a beeswax scent. There are lots of recipes about - you basically need a softening agent, as beeswax on it's own is too hard. There are variants that use chopping board oil, turpentine and boiled linseed oil - in various proportions - but don't use Linseed oil on its own with the beeswax as it tends to stay sticky for a long time. If you want a longer lasting shine you can also add a small percentage of Carnuba wax.
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