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 New life for old beeswax

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harmonyfarm Posted - Aug 12 2010 : 06:17:04 AM
I was given a large box of used beeswax foundations. Some of it was unused and still yellow and some of it was dark brown from years of use in the hives. I sorted it and decided to melted it down. I put about two inches of water into my big electric skillet and set a non-stick cake pan down into the skillet. Kinda used it as a makeshift double boiler. Oddly enough as the beeswax was melting, the "trash" in the wax formed a wad that was easy to remove from the good wax. I wanted to use the good beeswax to make some salves for Christmas, but, I didn't have anything to put the beeswax in to cool, so I got out my muffin pans and put muffin cup papers in it and poured the wax into them. I set the pan in the fridge and it only took 5 minutes for them to solidify. I'm getting ready to do this whole process again with the brown beeswax. Only this time, I'm going to pour it into paper 1/2 gallon milk cartons that a wick and crushed ice have been added to. The ice hardens the wax immediately into really beautiful shapes and when the ice melts and the whole thing cools, you just tear off the paper carton and have very interesting square pillar candles. I just love it when I'm given a challenge to make something new out of someone elses trash. And did I tell you that my whole house smelled like warm honey while I was doing this? It was torture but I managed to get through it...lol...

"If you can't find the time to do it right...how will you find the time to do it over"
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alterationsbyemily Posted - Sep 10 2010 : 10:59:42 AM
Wow, so many uses for beeswax! I enjoy my little bar I bought for 50 cents this past weekend, hand sewing here I come!

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See my custom costumes, download free patterns, and hear some spook EVPs from Gettysburg, PA on my site, www.alterationsbyemily.com
Roxy7 Posted - Sep 06 2010 : 09:01:58 AM
I made some molds from beeswax once to be used on thread for sewing and beading. I used little chocolate molds and hung a poked a ribbon into the back when it was still hot. You could actually hang them as ornaments as well. I made little angels.
corrabelle Posted - Aug 29 2010 : 7:49:14 PM
I love the smell of melting bees wax! I make lip balm with it and I'm always tempted to "test taste" just a little while i'm making it...lol

Corrabelle
http://themayberrysparrow.com
A Kansas gal living in Ontario. Sigh.

harmonyfarm Posted - Aug 12 2010 : 06:53:51 AM
Luanne...just be careful when the water is boiling, it wants to splash out around the edges of the inside pan.
Debbie

"If you can't find the time to do it right...how will you find the time to do it over"
Alee Posted - Aug 12 2010 : 06:53:26 AM
I love that you were recycling the beeswax. I know what you mean about it being torture though! I hope someday I can get my house to smell like beeswax all the time. I kindof harbor a hope that we will find a house that has beadboard or wood on the walls somwhere that I can do a rubbed beeswax finish on.

Alee
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beekeepersgirl Posted - Aug 12 2010 : 06:31:44 AM
Hi Debbie -

I have a lot of used beeswax also, and wanted to make candles with it, but I didn't know how to get all the "debris" out of it - thank you so much for the info! I don't have an electric skillet, but I'm sure a non-stick pan inside a larger pan of water would probably work too?

Luanne

beekeepersgirl

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