Are supermarket scented candles safe?

Are supermarket scented candles safe?
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SA CANDLE GUIDE · ASK & ANSWER ·  

Are supermarket scented candles safe?

Short answer

Mostly yes, for the odd evening in a room with a window cracked open. The catch with South African supermarket and chain-store candles, the ones from Woolworths, @home, Mr Price Home and Clicks, is that the label rarely states the wax, the wick, or the fragrance standard. Paraffin plus a cheap wick plus an undisclosed scent is often a standard with supermarket candles. 

What shapes the air in your room

Two things shape your air more than the wax. Soot comes from the wick: a metal-core or untrimmed wick burns dirty and leaves a grey ring on the glass, while a cotton or wood wick trimmed to about 5 mm burns clean. Lead-core wicks were the old hazard and most markets banned them years ago. The other thing is fragrance. The single word "fragrance" on a label can stand in for phthalates and a dozen undisclosed ingredients, so a candle made with IFRA-compliant oils or a fully listed scent is the one to trust.

How Mylk thinks about it

When it comes to ingredients, most chain-store candles fall short: they tell you almost nothing. At Mylk, we pour a coconut-soy wax with metal-free cotton wicks and IFRA-compliant perfume-grade oils, no paraffin, parabens or phthalates. Then confirm an even melt pool and a clean jar with a burn test. You can read all of it on the product page for our soy and coconut wax candles, which is the check a supermarket shelf usually can't pass.

For the full picture on wax, wicks and what "non-toxic" means on a label, read our guide to choosing a clean-burning candle in South Africa.

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