🔥 Ignite your invitations with timeless color and charm!
Yoption’s Sealing Wax Sticks come in 10 glossy, retro-inspired colors with built-in wicks for effortless melting. Each 9cm stick is perfect for adding a personalized, vintage seal to wedding invitations, gifts, crafts, and packaging, combining classic style with modern convenience.
C**C
Beautiful and Work as Expected
Beautiful colors, including some metallic. The burn cleanly. Great variety and quality for the price! Would buy again!
I**.
Color supper pretty
Just received haven’t used them but they look good. Look easy to use and a beautiful color. They are a little smaller than I thought but it’s okay.
E**E
Wax candle for stamps
I love the rustic shimmer color it give when it’s melted very easy to use and it’s good quality product to use! I am having so much fun using it for my Christmas letters
E**S
GORGEOUS COLORS-SMELLS LIKE MELTING PLASTIC
The colors are gorgeous. They melt well, and the embossing stamp works perfectly with it. However, the smell is very much of burning plastic. The burning plastic smell also lingers after.
C**K
Good quality
Works great!
J**A
Love the color, easy to use when melted instead
I ordered 3 packs of the light blue sealing wax to make seals for my wedding invitations. The color is more like a normal metallic blue rather than light blue but I like the color very much. After reading other reviews I decided to melt the sticks rather than burn them. I gathered a few household items: a wooden cutting board (so I could make multiple now then stick on later. Make sure the board is close to smooth and not textured ), a kitchen knife to cut the sticks into thirds, a jar candle warmer, a wide mouth small cup (I have ceramic espresso cups), a 1/4 tsp measuring spoon, ice water, (just in case the seal gets too hot) and the seal. After heating the wax until soft I remove the wicks then stir the wax occasionally until melted through. Using the 1/4 tsp spoon, I carefully pour wax to a mound about the size of a nickel to make a 1” seal. Immediately after I seal the wax so it doesn’t harden too soon. I use different spots on the cutting board so that one spot doesn’t get too warm for sealing. If the seal does stick you can gently scrap it off with the knife. If the seal does not come out right you can always melt it again and start over. Each stick can make 10 seals with a little bit left over :)
A**T
Not a fan of the ash in the wax
This was my first time trying wax seals. It took a little playing around, but I got it to work. However I will not be using these candle wax sticks again. If you look in the picture, especially the one on the left, it ends up with a lot of ash from the Candlewick in the wax. Also, The wax was so thin that when I tried putting it directly onto the bottle it and zip dripping without maybe not able to control it, So I ended up making the seals on wax paper, and them glue gunning them onto the bottles.Not attractive at all. Next time I think I'm try the glue sticks with a glue gun.
M**L
Yay for snail mail
I often joke to my friends that I'm single- handedly trying to bring letter writing back. Finding lovely stationery, and quality paper upon which to write notes and letters to loved ones is a passion of mine, and I recently invested in some wax seal stamps and wax sticks. It's not a text message, so it takes time, but this wax makes sealing an envelope with a hand written letter or note a special thing. Once I light the wax, it does well in leaving a puddle for me to press a sealing stamp into. It provides a secure seal, and I hope it makes the recipient feel kinda special, because someone took the time to old school a letter to them. Yay for snail mail!!
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