KARAN KING8 Hour UNSCENTED Long Burning TEALIGHT Candles - Long Lasting - Cotton Wicks - Versatile (Weddings, Birthdays, Parties, Restaurants, Massage Parlors, Spa) (Pack of 50)
Brand | KARAN KING |
Manufacturer | KARAN KING |
Product Dimensions | 4 x 4 x 1.5 cm; 1.2 kg |
Number of Items | 50 |
Colour | White |
Shape | Round |
Material | Wax |
Specific Uses | Parties, Birthdays, Massage, Weddings |
Special features | Long Burning, Dripless, Smokeless, Long Lasting, Unscented |
EU Energy Efficiency Label | A+++ |
Item Weight | 1.2 kg |
Guaranteed software updates until | unknown |
G**.
Long lasting.
Very good quality, no smoking when in use and last a very long time. Will be buying again.
L**T
Good value for money
These tealight candles actually lasted the full 8 hours, unlike others.
M**0
Long burn time
Great for using all day
V**D
Lovely slow burning time.
These candles are excellent, the best I’ve had. They’re deep and burn evenly.I’ve taken off a star because the box is ridiculously flimsy once opened and I’vejust dropped the whole lot on the floor, not because I cannot hold a box but becauseit’s so weak it just folds up. Change the cheap cardboard and you’ve got a winner
S**N
Last longer
Last longer and bigger than the usual 8hr candles well worth the money
A**
Impressive
These candles last way longer than 8 hrs.
S**D
Excellent value for money @ £11.99 per 100 candles
These candles give a clean odourless burn and in a warm draught free location, I'm achieving an average burn time of 9.5 hours per candle. In a colder location and where the air is not so static, I'm still achieving a burn time in excess of 8 hours per candle.At the current price of £11.99 per 100, they appear to be about the best value on Amazon.I highly recommend these candles from this seller.
A**
Um... dangerous? Maybe? Or self-error?
First of all, these definitely are long lasting. Which is always a positive seeing as some candles do not stand up to the 8-hour promised time. No scent, as they are scentless candles, so that's another accuracy to the listing!But we've had problems with... combustion? I don't know the right word for what happened. Basically, after some of them were lit for hours (don't know the exact amount), we noticed a strange smell. An awful smell, actually, and after looking into the foil candle holders, we noticed just a swirling mass of blue flames, roiling around in the bottom and gradually growing in size.Like an absolute moron, I put it under the kitchen tap- a rookie move, I am aware, but was too panicked to think clearly in the moment. As soon as water touched the blue swirling portal to the underworld, FWOOOM! The flames leapt high into the air, singed one of my plant's leaves, and almost stole my eyebrows. My fault- I should have just found something to smother the flames like a pot lid or dampened a tea towel and thrown it over.But after the poor assault done to my plant and face, I looked inside the foil holder, and noticed that what appeared to have happened was that the foil itself had begun to melt. Like, it was black, and bent, and it seems that the small amount of wax/oil left in the very bottom of the candle after the hours of burning had caught fire. It was just as scary the second time it happened as the first.The only reason I am hesitant to actually blame this on the candles themselves is because both times this happened, we had multiple candles lit, in different holders (a pink salt one, a fake diamond one, and a generic glass one). And it never happened to those candles, despite there being about six lit at the same time. No, actually, I looked into it online and found that it seems that the fault most likely lies with me for having them in an ill-suited holder.We have an Egyptian sphynx double tealight holder, and the actual holder segments appear to be made of gold, or at least painted with it. And apparently, long-burning candles are not suited to gold, as it can cause combustion of the oil in the candles. Something about it being a poor conductor of heat, or a good one, I am not sure. But something about the conduction! So... I doubt the candles were to blame, since both times it happened, it happened in that tealight holder.Still felt it was worth mentioning just as a caution to other buyers about the danger we had no idea gold presented, but also just in case for some reason, the candles themselves did have some kind of fault in them.But as it seems we were just uninformed on tealight-etiquette and safety, I would still like to say that the candles burn very long as promised and seem to be a great bargain for the amount.Stay safe, and ditch the gold XD
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