- Sep
- 23
Selecting the Purest Candles: Without Tallow, Paraffin, or Beeswax
Posted by Ingrid Newkirk at 8:19 AM | Permalink | Comments (3)
I am excited to announce our newest contest at PETA Prime-a chance to win six vegan, cruelty-free scented candles from the popular candle company A Scent of Scandal. Like many people, you may be asking: What makes a candle vegan and cruelty-free? What harmful products are often used in candles?
I addressed these very questions in a chapter in one of my books, Making Kind Choices:
Shopping for candles, whether to light the table for that special romantic evening, votive candles to float in the bath, or ones to pop in the kitchen drawer just in case the lights go out, means thinking about what goes into them.
The main ingredients to avoid are beeswax, which is stolen from the industrious bees’ hive, tallow (a slaughterhouse product), and paraffin wax, a petroleum product that is associated with health risks. Today, there are wonderful decorative and practical household candles, all easy to find, that are made from soy and other ingredients that are kind to the environment, as well as to your health, and which do not depend on killing and stealing from animals.
According to environmental watchdogs, there are three main reasons to avoid buying petroleum (paraffin) products. These are:
• Petroleum smoke/exhaust contains many carcinogenic toxins and produces ugly black soot
• Petroleum is not a renewable resource and it is of a limited supply
• Burning petroleum products creates air pollution and contributes to global warming
Paraffin candles contain up to 11 carcinogenic compounds which have been deemed “toxic air contaminants” by the State of California. An air quality researcher, David Krause, has documented evidence that candle soot particles contain many of the same compounds given off from burning diesel fuel.
No one really knows when the first candle was invented, but in Roman times candles were made of the pith of certain rushes, peeled except on one side, and dipped in animal fat, so animal fat was always a factor. Today, tallow candles are still made from “rendered” sheep or beef fat from around the cow’s kidneys, so little wonder they can go rancid, can cause irritations in sensitive people, and smell awful once you know exactly what it is your nose is picking up!
A fine alternative to animal tallow is vegetable tallow, a substance resembling tallow, obtained from various plants. Chinese vegetable tallow is obtained from the seeds of the tallow tree, and Indian vegetable tallow is a name sometimes given to piney tallow.
Vegetable wax is also a safe ingredient. This is simply a waxy excretion on the leaves or fruits of certain plants, such as the bayberry.
By the Middle Ages candles were common. Tallow, beeswax, and vegetable wax such as bayberry in North American, candleberry in the East, and waxberry in South America, were later supplemented by whale oil (spermaceti) and by stearine or stearic acid in the early 1800s (this is still obtained from plants which process the carcasses of dogs and cats killed in animal pounds and shelters), then by paraffin in the mid-1800s.
Somewhere along the way, people learned to pour beeswax over the wicks. Here’s why to avoid it:
Whether we are stealing honey, royal jelly, pollen, propolis, or wax from bees, these incredible little insects-capable of complicated communication documented in their dances and of a social network compared to which our most carefully designed modern communities pale, suffer and die quite needlessly.
First, smoke is blown into the bees’ hives to make the bees easier to deal with. Next, a “bee brush” is used to crudely sweep away the bees who rush from the hive and succumb to the smoke. In sweeping them aside, the wire tines break off their legs and wings. Bee farmers then remove the honey and the honeycomb, which is, of course, the hive’s main source of nourishment, and replace it with cheap white sugar. Animal wax used in candles (and certain other products, including some polishes, crayons and lip balms) comes from the honeycomb.
It’s easy to pick out “clean candles” as, usually, candle ingredients are marked on them, but sometimes you do have to poke about a bit or ask sales assistants to call the manufacturer for more details than given on the labels. Instead of beeswax-coated wicks, you can also buy paper, hemp and cotton wicks. Next time you buy or light a candle, you can really shine!
One of our PETA Business Friends, A Scent of Scandal, sells fun, vegan candles-and don’t forget to enter to win six of these great candles delivered to your home.
Posted to Home & Garden | Posted to Tags: candles, cruelty-free products, Ingrid Newkirk
- Post this story to:
- Digg
- del.icio.us
- Newsvine
More:




Tom says...
September 29th, 2008, 2:24 pm
This is all news to me, yikes! And I had no idea the cruelty involved in taking products from bees, breaking off their little legs and wings. How horrible! We love the bees in our yard, rolling around in the middle of our flowers collecting pollen. Only soy candles in our home from now on.
Dog Girl says...
December 16th, 2008, 5:23 pm
Dont get me wrong, I’m all about avoiding cruelty. But bees? My dad and grandma both raised bees, and I plan on doing it myself some day.
Smoke sends the bees into the hive where they start gorging on honey to save some of it in case the shit is burning down. They don’t succumb to the smoke! They gorge and get out. They’re docile because they are more concerned about their hive burning down than they are about the big goofy human, so they’re not as likely to sting. Bee farmers generally don’t do anything to kill or harm the bees! They also time the romoval of honey and comb to a time when the bees can make it up. That keeps the hive healthy and more likely to swarm and make another hive. They make far, far more honey than they need.
When there is a huge lack of pollen for whatever reason sugar can be offered so you don’t loose your hive, so they don’t starve to death. and while it’s probably not preferable, it’s better than starving to death! Plus sugar makes shitty honey in the end, and that’s what the bees do with it, make more honey. People also offer things like cola and other soft drink syrups to make flavored honey. If the bees are starving they’ll use it, but otherwise, they go for pollen.
When times are really tough bees eat bugs and that makes the worst honey of all.
I am alarmed when I find stuff like this on websites because it makes me question everything else on there, you know? What else did they half assedly research? Not that I am saying people are wrong to go vegan and vegetarian, or that cruelty isn’t bloody well everywhere! But bees?
pat says...
June 12th, 2009, 12:33 pm
I work in the beeswax industry. What I hear from the bee keepers that we talk to really contradicts what PETA is saying. The bee keepers speak lovingly of their bees and when I ask about the concern we hear about harming the bees they get upset. They say they would never hurt their bees knowingly. I have been a vegetarian for 35 years. I am very concerned about the ethical treatment of animals. I think the vegans should be more concerned about the number of worms & insects killed by big farming machines and animals displaced by habitat disruption by the multi million dollar powerful soy industry.