7 Tips for Burning the Perfect Candle

Written by Chere Deshayes


Tapers, columns, votives, containers, pillars and novelty - chances are you have at least one of these types of candles in your home. Surveys done by candle manufacturers suggest that 7 out of 10 U.S households use candles, 96% of which are purchased by women. The basics for candles are easy, just light them! However, if you want to getrepparttar most out of your candles and not watch your money go up in smoke (literally), here are seven tips to follow.

1. KEEP THE WICK TRIMMED One ofrepparttar 111052 best things that you can do for your candles is to keeprepparttar 111053 wick trimmed to ¼ of an inch. Wicks that are allowed to get larger than ¼ of an inch tend to burn faster and smoke. If you are noticing black soot accumulating on your container candles,repparttar 111054 wick is too long. Nail clippers are a great tool for trimming wicks that can’t be reached with scissors.

2. AVOID DRAFTS Burning candles in drafty areas can cause uneven burning and excessive smoking. Not to mention that your candle will burn faster. If you noticerepparttar 111055 flame ofrepparttar 111056 candle flickering in any direction other than straight up, there is a draft. Prevent drafts by keeping burning candles away from heating and air-conditioning vents and open windows.

3. REFRIGERATE THEM Candles that are cold will burn slower. To cool you candle, first wrap in foil or cling wrap to preventrepparttar 111057 wick from absorbing any moisture. Pop them inrepparttar 111058 fridge for about an hour and light! Make sure you don’t put them inrepparttar 111059 freezer instead. They will break!

What Burglars Know that You Should Know

Written by Nigel Smithers


What Professional Burglars Know that You Should Know

Professional burglars concentrate on easy targets because they know their chances of success depend on their coming and going without being noticed. So what can you do as a homeowner to make sure you are not inviting someone into your home who doesn’t belong there?.

“As silly as it sounds,” says Nigel Smithers, a retired police officer andrepparttar CEO of Watchdog Protection Industries, Inc., “the first thing you should do before you leave home for work or play, is make sure that all of your doors, includingrepparttar 111051 garage door and side garage entrance, are locked. An incredibly large number of burglars don’t even have to break into a home because homeowners simply forget to lock a swinging or sliding door.”

Smithers also recommends you remember to attend to ground floor windows. “Duringrepparttar 111052 summer months especially, homeowners frequently open windows to take advantage ofrepparttar 111053 evening air and forget to close them before they leave inrepparttar 111054 morning.”

Aside fromrepparttar 111055 obvious, Smithers also recommends homeowners make sure that they are not leaving subtle messages that no one is home. “Unfortunately, many homeowners subscribe to newspapers that are dropped onrepparttar 111056 driveway or front step after they depart for work. This is an open invitation to a professional burglar who, when canvassing a neighborhood, is observant enough to recognize an opportunity when he sees it,” he said.

“A professional isn’t likely to hit a homerepparttar 111057 first time he sees a newspaper onrepparttar 111058 driveway at noon, but he may take action if it becomes a pattern,” he said.

To solve this problem Smithers recommends that homeowners either make arrangements to have their newspapers delivered to a location onrepparttar 111059 property that is not visible torepparttar 111060 casual observer or that arrangements are made for a neighbor to pick it up when it’s delivered.

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