![]() ![]() The thicker the string, the larger the candle diameter and the more light the candle will provide. We stock affordable basic cotton string for oil candle wicks (pictured below) and sturdier rope oil candle wicks or you can find it in virtually any hardware store. It's easy to make your own homemade candlewick! To make candle wicks you will need: any 100% cotton string or twine. As long as your wick is wet with oil, the oil is what is burned, not the wick.ĭo not buy specialty candle wicks for making small string, rope wick candles or olive oil lamps. With moderate wick burning and never letting wicks get dry, you'll not have to worry about running out of them. Remember the key to proper wick maintenance is to be sure the wicks are always properly soaked in the lamp oil (Never burn them dry). Improper wick trimming results in ragged edges with flaring corners preventing the flame from being turned up to full height and can break the oil lamp chimney (don't worry, we carry oil lamp chimney glass replacements.) This slight adjustment may improve the shape of your flame - give it a try! ![]() You can trim your wick in any way you prefer. Wicks can be trimmed rounded or in a double point. Some wick trimmers cut the corners of the wick at an angle, making a triangled point. One can cut the wick perfectly straight across the resulting flame will be broad, flat and rounding at corners. The photo above explains tick trimming techniques. Careful! Even after the flame is out the chimney can remain hot for an hour. You'll have to clean the chimney much less and your fuel combustion will be cleaner. Your goal is to simply trim the char off the wicks after each use. ![]() Still, it is an easy art even for beginners. The more you experiment the better at wick trimming you become. Proper wick trimming will provide much better light and general satisfaction. The best way to find the correct size wick is to measure your burner. This information does not apply to all styles of lamps and lanterns. *Wick thickness for oil lamps and antique lanterns are for general purposes only. Most of our wicks are of medium thickness and will have no problem fitting a lamp or lantern of proper width. Less than one millimeter is the difference between the biggest and smallest wick thickness. The table below provides the general range of wick thickness in inches and millimeters. If you're having a hard time rolling the wick through the burner - and if the width is not to wide - then you need a thinner wick. The good news is the thickness of wicks differ only slightly. Nevertheless small oil lamps or those with delicate small burners can require a thin wick too. Most antique oil lamps and newer varieties have a burner for thicker wick. Thinner wicks do not get easily tangled in the star wheel wick raiser of the lantern burner. Wicks for oil lanterns are often a thinner, very tightly woven wick. ![]()
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