I enjoy quilting by hand anyway. I do have multiple sewing machines.
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Some folks treat their thread with beeswax while quilting to make it slip through the fabric better and tangle less.oh and be careful, word on the street is it's very flammable. Watch it closely while you heat it (ie don't walk away).
I've never had an issue with it, but I'm careful.
I'm pretty low-tech and cheap but it works.
I found some old pots at the town dump in the swap shed. You do not want to use pots that you will use for food, ever. Or utensils.
I made a double boiler out of the 2 old pots. Note that you can also do this in boiling water in just one pot and then let it all cool, and crack it out, but then I feel like I have to double boil it again to get it into a usable brick because this method makes it really thin.
Anyway, once it is all melted, I pour it into the mold, but you should strain it. While the old honey will sink to the bottom and the wax will float on top, the dead bees and stuff also get caught up in it, and you need to strain it to get a pretty brick. I use cheesecloth most of the time, it works the best, but if I don't have any, I will use pantyhose (probably about the only thing I've used pantyhose for in the last 25 years).
Once it's strained, cool it. I shove it in the fridge. Crack the wax out, the bottom will still be liquid, that's the old honey that didn't completely drain. It doesn't take long to harden.
You can save the crap you drained, I think it's called sluggum and it can be used as firestarter.
After a few years you may have multiple bricks, and you can just melt and pour them into one "mold." I tend to use plastic take out containers. Once cooled they just crack right out.
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Yes, but I'm very fiscally responsible and this is so anti-me. I spent almost this much on my car 9 years ago. That just seems absurd to me.
oh and be careful, word on the street is it's very flammable. Watch it closely while you heat it (ie don't walk away).
I've never had an issue with it, but I'm careful.