what materials would you recommend for someone who wants to try this method?
links?
links?
what materials would you recommend for someone who wants to try this method?
links?
Hi,
Is there a reason the cheese cloth is so white? Has it been bleached?
Curious as a lot of the natural cotton isn't bright white. This is why I boil my favorite #2 box wick.
Thanks,
Chris
Not sure 'who' your question is for - but if it's about the pictures I just posted. That's not cheesecloth around the SS wick, it's bamboo yarn. The cheesecloth I have is a pale tannish-yellow in color.
Hi,
My question is for anyone using cheese cloth. The package of it that I bought is pretty white.
Chris
I've been using cheesecloth without issue, and mine too was solid white. As the package stated 100% cotton and 100% food safe, I didn't do much more research into whether it was bleached or not, but I assume since it was the same color as the 100% gauze I bought from Walgreen's, it was not bleached or otherwise contaminated.
I experience no taste difference between cheesecloth and gauze, but gauze is easier to roll into a wick than cheesecloth due to the number of threads in a layer and density.
Yet raw cotton looks rather white to me
![]()
The 100 percent organic, natural cheese cloth I have is actually an off white color. It's more of a beige. It's from mountain rose herbs online and it specifically says it's unbleached thus the color I assume.
The wick I use can be found on amazon #1/0 Candle wick(unleaded and unprimed 100 percent cotton wick). It's also an off white.
I'd post links but I'm not sure if someone would have issues with it since these are obviously not supporting vendors.
Yet raw cotton looks rather white to me
![]()
Hey BJ, I tried out your Vivi Nova idea on my CE2 this morning. Instead of clipping the silica wick on each side of the ceramic cup, though, I removed the silica wick, threaded a cotton wick into the coil, clipped on each side of the ceramic cup and laid another cotton wick on top of the coil with the legs hanging down over the sides of the cup. It's been working great.
The past couple of cotton wicks have either been too loose (hot spots) or too tight (not wicking well); I believe this set up throws those problems right out the window.
![]()
Have some of that same candle wick coming to me in a few days. Do you boil it before use?