When you’ve laid in a good supply of various different
candles, you will need something to hold the candles while they are
burning. Your candle holders can be as
simple or as fancy as you wish. You can
melt a little wax in a metal jar lid and stick your candle in that.
You can pour a little sand in a glass jar and stick your
candle down in that. Add a wire bail and
you will have a fairly functional lantern that will not be blown out by every
breeze that comes along.
I would advise against using wooden candle holders, either
store-bought or home-made. When your
candle burns down to the bottom it can catch the wood on fire and then you
could have real problems. You can see by
this photo from my earlier candle test that a wooden holder can definitely
catch fire.
If your candles will be stationary and inside out of the
wind, metal candlesticks work just fine.
I have to admit to having a little bit of a thing for antique pewter
candlesticks. If they are at all
reasonably priced, I just can’t pass them up.
We generally use oil lamps during power outages, but we have
been known to break out the candlesticks on occasion. One winter our power went out about an hour
before 12 people were due to come over for dinner and a small after-Christmas
party. We already had the open face wood
stove burning, so all we had to do was break out the candles and the party went
off without a hitch. Of course it helped
that the attendees were all members of our mountain man club, so they thought
the 19th century ambiance was great.
We have wall sconces in our dining room that hold three
candles each, and a candelabrum that sits on the table holding another three
candles.
This makes for a fairly bright dining room, but in any long
term situation I would not burn this many candles. If you have just a couple of candles burning
in an average size room you will be surprised at how fast your eyes adjust and
make the room seem fairly well lighted.
Not read a book or do needlepoint well lighted, but good enough for most
activities. Remember, most of the old
time country folks didn’t “burn the mid-night oil” very often. Activities that required a lot of light were
preformed during the day. When the sun
went down, bedtime was not far off.
If you will be walking around the house with a candle, or
especially if you are going outside; a candlestick will not work. No matter how slow you go, or how hard you
try to protect the flame with your hand, your candle will blow out. What you need is a candle lantern.
There are many different kinds of candle lanterns, but they
all have the same basic purpose. They
are made to protect the candle flame from being accidentally blown out while
still allowing the flame to illuminate the immediate area. As mentioned above you can improvise a pretty
good lantern with a jar, some sand, a candle, and some wire; but there are many
styles of ready made lanterns available.
The punched tin, or Paul Revere lantern is an attractive
lantern; but, in my opinion, it is one of the least practical. It just does not emit enough light, and the
light that it does emit is in a very distracting pattern. I would save this one for decoration and buy
a more practical lantern for actual use.
Most stores that carry home decorator items will have a good
variety of candle lanterns, and they usually don’t cost that much. You can buy two or three of these for your
home without breaking the bank.
This wooden candle lantern is one that I bought at a
mountain man rendezvous.
I’ve used it for years, and it works quite well. The only problem I have with it is that the
actual candle holder is wood, so you have to keep an eye on it so it doesn’t
catch fire. Also, you can’t burn really
tall candles in it or the flame may set the top on fire. Sounds kind of dangerous now that I think
about it, but I’ve never had any problems.
This last candle lantern is one that I made on the same
basic pattern as the mountain man lantern above. Two differences are that I made it much
smaller because I will only burn tea candles and votives in it, and I made the
actual candle holder out of a metal jar lid so as to avoid the catching on fire
problem.
I also made a little protective box to carry it in. The box has some storage space on the bottom where
I can keep candles, matches, and a chain with hooks to hang the lantern.
Here is a comparison photo of five different lanterns in
use. From left to right they are (1)
candle in a jar improvised lantern, (2) Paul Revere lantern, (3) decorator
lantern, (4) wooden mountain man lantern, and (5) small home-made wooden
lantern.
For purposes of comparison the
first four lanterns are all burning standard paraffin emergency candles. Lantern number 5 is burning one of the
paraffin tea candles that it was designed for.
All except the Paul Revere lantern produce good light. I have been known to lay in my cot at night
reading by the light of my mountain man candle lantern, so the light must be
pretty good.
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