Wick'n'Wax Posted May 24, 2007 Share Posted May 24, 2007 talk about stupid!!I haven't made any candles for 2 days, having to have a major clean up and tidy of the house ready for pictures for estate agent.so........ 2 days ago, I put my 6 votive moulds and 10 tart moulds in a large glass jug and poured boiling water on them, with the intention of leaving them to soak a little.I kept looking and thinking I'll do those in a min, but never got round to it.They are now all covered in rust spots which I can't get off and still waxy/greasyI'm gutted! and stupid :embarasse Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Breanna Posted May 24, 2007 Share Posted May 24, 2007 Awww, Im sorry this has happened to you,,,:awww: Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
britishgirl Posted May 24, 2007 Share Posted May 24, 2007 try some light sand paper and Wd40 or small amount of rust remover i did this once then same as you forgot about them, it worked for me so fingers crossedand if you need some votive moulds shout i'll send some down to use:) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
IndyGirl Posted May 24, 2007 Share Posted May 24, 2007 Awwwwww...............All you had to do was warm them up and wipe them out with paper towels. I did that washing thing once and rusted a bunch of them. So now, my equipment never touches water. They should be ok to use though just heat them up and wipe out the residue. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Wick'n'Wax Posted May 24, 2007 Author Share Posted May 24, 2007 I had them on a tray just now to go in the oven, but rang my dad first. He said wire wool or sand paper and wd40. But first I'm going to try some wax.I've melted down a load of old wax and am going to pour into the votives and melt moulds, see if it doesn't bring some of the rust colour of with it.Cross ya fingers cant believe I did it, what a muppet! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
britishgirl Posted May 24, 2007 Share Posted May 24, 2007 would imagine theres few of us that havent:) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Candles by Lisa Posted May 24, 2007 Share Posted May 24, 2007 I did something really silly too not so long ago. I had washed out a whole load of polycarbonate moulds, dried them and I put them in the oven to get ride of any left over wax. Put them in at 50, left them, forgot about them, went to make the dinner turned the over up to 180 and only remembered the moulds where still in them when I smelled the burning plastic.I had a round mould in there and honestly when I took them out they looked like a couple of silicone breast implants!! The pillars just turned into blobs - needless to say I haven't done that again.And good luck with the estate agents.Lisa Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Wick'n'Wax Posted May 24, 2007 Author Share Posted May 24, 2007 oh lord, I'll bet your kitchen smelt lovely lolDon't feel so bad now Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Cindys Posted May 24, 2007 Share Posted May 24, 2007 Ive never done the oven thing with molds, but once put a cake in there. That had taken all day to make Oreo cream filling, Home made buttercream frosting. I have a sheperd and a Golden so I put it in the oven while I stepped out. Well needless to say the cake did not need to be baked again. I cryed when I realized what I had done. So weve all done something not thinking Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SatinDucky Posted May 24, 2007 Share Posted May 24, 2007 That really sucks As others said... with metal molds... always the oven or heat gun, never water! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Scented Posted May 24, 2007 Share Posted May 24, 2007 Yep never water. I clean by oven, but once turned the dial to broil instead of warm and poof saw the small fire. Lost a few molds that I couldn't get the black out of. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NattyCat Posted May 24, 2007 Share Posted May 24, 2007 I had them on a tray just now to go in the oven' date=' but rang my dad first. He said wire wool or sand paper and wd40. But first I'm going to try some wax.I've melted down a load of old wax and am going to pour into the votives and melt moulds, see if it doesn't bring some of the rust colour of with it.Cross ya fingers cant believe I did it, what a muppet![/quote']I lost 50 votive moulds this way - all soaking in a sink. I then decided water was a rather crap way to clean them, so fill both of my ovens with my new batch of 50 moulds - and then forgot about them and they all turned black and were unusable.Now I turn them upside down on a piece of kitchen towel, and heat the base with my heatgun for 8 to 10 seconds each and then using a wad of towel i pick up the hot ones and wipe out with kitchen towel. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
aimgrace Posted May 24, 2007 Share Posted May 24, 2007 I am so glad I happened by this post. I have some metal molds I made I coffee scented/brown colored candle in yesterday. I am making an aqua color/ocean scented today and didn't want an ocean/coffee, brown/aqua candle. I used palm wax, and that stuff just breaks and slides out so good, but no chances. The oceans are gifts. So to the oven I go. Thanks all. -Aimee Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
dashmo37 Posted May 24, 2007 Share Posted May 24, 2007 I love Barkeepers helper to remove rust. I used it on a few molds that were given to me rusty. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
candlesprite7 Posted May 24, 2007 Share Posted May 24, 2007 Now I turn them upside down on a piece of kitchen towel, and heat the base with my heatgun for 8 to 10 seconds each and then using a wad of towel i pick up the hot ones and wipe out with kitchen towel.Yep this is how I clean my molds too. Nothing ever touches water and I refuse to drag them up and down the stairs to clean them in the oven. Besides one day I left a metal mold in the oven too long and the solder melted...lol...oops. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Pam W Posted May 24, 2007 Share Posted May 24, 2007 He said wire wool or sand paper .NO' date=' NO, NO[/b']......that will scratch the finish of the mold....WD40 & papertowels is ok. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Wick'n'Wax Posted May 24, 2007 Author Share Posted May 24, 2007 i've unmoulded them and the rust has come off onto the votives and melts but its still on moulds too.Will try wd40 tomorrow.how daft am I, stupid stupid stupid Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AnjieBurdett Posted May 24, 2007 Share Posted May 24, 2007 Don't beat y'self up about it Yvette, i've done something similar (involving an oven not water LOL). You'll get it sorted one way or another Anjie,x. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NattyCat Posted May 24, 2007 Share Posted May 24, 2007 i've unmoulded them and the rust has come off onto the votives and melts but its still on moulds too.Will try wd40 tomorrow.how daft am I' date=' stupid stupid stupid [/quote']you can never fully get the rust off. I've tried. I used WD40, metal polish and silicone spray and the rest never completely comes off - and it's really noticeable on white candles. You may well have ruined your moulds, but I guess it's a lesson learnt - at least it wasn't pillar moulds - which are MUCH more expensive.I am about to order some metal votive moulds and have them sent over here with some other bits and pieces - if you want to add to my order then this will save you postage costs - I doubt a few votive moulds are going to add any weight to my order so once I've decided on what I'm getting - I can let you know where I'm getting them and how much they are - but I think they're no more than $1 each.Nat Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jane42 Posted May 25, 2007 Share Posted May 25, 2007 Why oh why do some companies send the metal melt molds with the bar code stickers on them?!?! I tried soaking them off and drying them in the oven......you guessed it, rust! So then I decide I am going to use goo-gone to get the stickers off.....well, it took MOST of the sticker off, but not the adhesive, so now when I use them, they stick to the foil I put them on while pouring. Not so great when I go to do my second pour.....I pour one, then go to move another mold next to it to do that second pour and it is stuck to foil, so everything moves...what a mess! Ohhhhhh, it really annoys me every single time I have to use them! Sorry you ended up with rust on yours.....ours didn't end up being too bad by the time I caught them, so they are still usable. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Candle Kitty Posted May 25, 2007 Share Posted May 25, 2007 Don't be discouraged at all. If I had a dime for every time I made a mistake similar to this, I wouldn't have to work. Just breathe deep, relax the mind, calm down and work the problem.You're probably going to have some rust stick to the candles and some that won't. Take the ones with the rust and set them off to the side to use as test candles. I've done this before myself and was able to get the rust out of the molds and the batch is not a complete waste. Use the WD-40 and make sure to really wipe them down and out, you don't want that stuff to be on the candles.It's not that hard and believe me, there's people that has done this before, chalk it up as a learning experience and you'll be fine! :-) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ramaroa Posted May 26, 2007 Share Posted May 26, 2007 Don't feel bad, I am sure I have done worse, I put mine in the dishwasher. :tiptoe: I blame the people who make them, why do they make them from cheap tacky old tin that goes rusty with one glimpse of water? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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