Meshcast by Meshminds by @meshminds3d

Candle Making Guide

You've designed your mold - now turn it into actual candles. This guide walks you through everything from filament choice to that first successful pour. Read it once, then come back for the troubleshooting section when something goes wrong.

What you'll need

PLA filament 1kg ~€20

PLA stays rigid under wax pour temps. Avoid PETG (warps).

Buy →
Paraffin pillar wax 1kg ~€12

Holds detail best. Soy is too soft for freestanding shapes.

Buy →
Cotton wick variety pack ~€10

CD-series fits paraffin and soy. Size chart in step 3.

Buy →
Mold release spray ~€12

Cooking spray works in a pinch; proper silicone release makes demolding 10× easier.

Buy →
Two #64 rubber bands ~€5

Standard office bands. Wrap into the grooves to clamp the halves shut. Stay elastic at pour temps.

Buy →
Starter kit (excluding printer) ~€59

Also handy if you've got them: a digital thermometer (so you don't guess the wax temp) and a metal pouring pitcher for the double-boiler. Not strictly required.

Print & Prepare

1

Print and dry-fit

3D-printed orange PLA mold halves ready to be assembled

Slice with 0.2mm layers, 3 walls, 15–20% gyroid infill, PLA at 210°C. Print both halves flat-face-down on the same plate so they cool to matching dimensions. Dry-fit before pouring - the seam must close with no daylight through it. Gap? Reprint with 4 walls.

2

Pick the right wick size

Cotton candle wicks of varying thicknesses arranged side by side

Match the wick to your candle's widest diameter. Too small → tunneling. Too big → smoking and fast burn.

Candle diameterParaffinSoy/beeswax
Up to 38mmLX 10 / CD 6ECO 2 / CD 8
38–50mmLX 14 / CD 8ECO 4 / CD 10
50–63mmLX 18 / CD 10ECO 8 / CD 12
63–76mmLX 22 / CD 14ECO 12 / CD 16
76mm+LX 24+ / CD 18+ECO 14+ / CD 18+

Pour

3

Thread the wick & spray release

Wick threaded through the mold and secured with a pencil across the top

Cut the wick 5cm longer than the candle. Thread it through the pour hole, wrap the top around a pencil laid across the opening so it stays centered. Lightly mist the inside of each half with mold release - a thin film, not drenched.

Lightly spraying mold release into an open mold half
4

Clamp with rubber bands

Fully assembled mold with rubber bands wrapped around the grooves

Press the halves together with the wick centered. Stretch one #64 rubber band into each of the two grooves. They should sit flush. Loose? Double-wrap.

5

Melt & pour

Melted wax being poured slowly into the top opening of the mold

Double boiler (pitcher in simmering water - never direct heat). Add dye/fragrance after melting (6–10% fragrance by weight). Pour slowly into the top opening, leaving the air vent open.

WaxPour temp
Paraffin pillar75–85°C
Soy57–63°C
Beeswax70–80°C
Stay below 90°C. PLA softens above 85°C and warps the mold.
Tip: Save 50ml warm wax to top up the sinkhole that forms around the wick ~30 min in.

Finish

6

Cool & demold

Cooled candle being demolded from the two-part printed mold

4–6 hours at room temperature. No fridge - rapid cooling cracks and frosts the surface. Roll the rubber bands off (don't lift) and pull the halves apart. Stuck? Warm tap water over the outside for 30s.

7

Clean & cure

Finished candle with seam line cleaned and wick trimmed, ready to cure

Scrape the seam line off with a knife or fingernail. Trim the wick to ~6mm. If you used fragrance, cure 1–2 weeks before burning so the scent binds.

Troubleshooting

The wax leaked out the seam

Dry-fit and check for daylight at the seam. Double-wrap the rubber bands; if there's still a gap, reprint with 4 walls. For molds >100mm, switch to #84 bands.

The candle won't come out of the mold

Either you skipped mold release, demolded too early (under 4h), or the cavity has undercuts. Run warm water over the outside for 30s, then try again.

The candle has a rough/bumpy surface

Print layer lines on the candle. Fixes in order: reprint at 0.12mm, sand the cavity (400/800 grit), or coat with XTC-3D for a glass finish.

The wick won't stay centered

Tape the top to a pencil across the opening; weight the bottom with a wick base. If it drifts, you're pouring too fast.

Air bubbles in the candle

Pour slower at the right temperature. Make sure the vent isn't plugged. Gently tap the filled mold 2–3 times to release trapped bubbles.

The PLA mold deformed

Wax was too hot. PLA softens above 85°C - always check with a thermometer. For 100°C+ waxes, reprint in PETG or HTPLA.

The candle tunnels when burning

Wick is too small. Size up one or two from the chart. Always burn ≥3 hours on first lighting so the full surface pools.

Resin Casting Guide

For jewelry, charms, and small detailed pieces. Two stages: pour silicone around your printed master to make a flexible mold, then pour resin into that silicone mold.

How This Works

Resin sticks to PLA - pour it directly into a printed mold and it bonds permanently. Silicone is flexible, captures fine detail, and releases resin cleanly. That's why we need the intermediate step.

[IMAGE 1: Workflow overview] A simple 3-panel infographic or photo sequence showing: (1) printed master + outer box STLs from the tool, (2) silicone poured around the master inside the box, (3) finished resin jewelry piece next to the silicone mold. Arrows between each panel. Flat-lay overhead style, clean cream/white background. This is the orientation visual that explains the whole process at a glance.

Choosing Your Silicone

Two types of silicone - both work, different tradeoffs.

Tin-curePlatinum-cure
Price$15-25/lb$30-60/lb
Detail captureGoodExcellent
Mold life20-50 casts100+ casts
ShrinkageSome (over time)Almost none
Cure inhibition riskVery lowHigh (sensitive)
Best forBeginners, short runsProduction, fine detail
Tip: Start with tin-cure. Switch to platinum-cure once you're confident - longer mold life pays for itself.
Platinum-cure is fussy: Sulfur (clay, latex, some PLA dyes) and uncured photoresin can stop it curing. PLA-printed masters from this tool are fine for both, but resin-printed masters should use tin-cure.

What You'll Need

  • 🧵
    PLA filament (1kg) ~€20
    Print smooth (0.12mm layers) - every layer line transfers to your mold and final jewelry. Buy →
  • 🧪
    Mold-making silicone (1kg) ~€40
    OOMOO 30 for beginners (tin-cure). Mold Star 15 for production (platinum). OOMOO 30 →
  • 💎
    UV or epoxy resin (500g) ~€25
    UV resin: 2–5 min under a lamp, ideal for small jewelry. Epoxy: 24–72h, no lamp. UV kit →
  • 💡
    UV lamp (UV resin only) ~€25
    36W+ for faster cures. Many UV resin kits include one. Buy →
  • ⚖️
    Digital scale (0.1g) ~€15
    Non-negotiable - silicone and epoxy are mixed by weight. Buy →
  • 🧤
    Nitrile gloves + mask ~€15
    Uncured silicone and resin are skin irritants. Mask matters when sanding cured resin. Buy →
  • 💍
    Jewelry findings ~€10
    Earring hooks, jump rings, eye pins. Only needed if you're making jewelry. Buy →
  • Starter kit (excluding printer) ~€135
Also handy if you've got them: a few disposable plastic cups + popsicle sticks for mixing, and a small bottle of mold release if you're going with platinum-cure silicone. Not strictly required.

Make the Silicone Mold

1

Print the master + box smooth

Layer lines on the master transfer to silicone, then to every resin piece. Slice at 0.08–0.12mm, 3 walls, 15% infill, slow speed. Sand with 400→800 grit or coat with XTC-3D for a glass finish.

2

Glue master in box, mix & pour silicone

Dot the master to the bottom of the box with super glue (≥10mm space all sides - thinner tears, thicker wastes silicone). Measure volume by filling the empty space with rice into a measuring cup, +10%. Most silicones mix 1:1 by weight: pour Part A, zero scale, equal weight Part B, stir slowly 3–5 min. Pour into one corner in a pencil-lead-thin stream - don't splash on the master or you'll trap bubbles in the detail.

3

Cure & demold the silicone

Tin-cure 6–24h, platinum 3–8h. Don't poke. Once cured, peel the silicone from the printed box (single-use), flex it to release the master, inspect for trapped bubbles or missing detail.

Cast Resin

4

Pick UV or epoxy resin

UV resin cures in 2–5 min under a lamp - ideal for thin pieces. Epoxy needs 24–72h but works for thick or large pieces (>1cm) and embeds.

UVEpoxy
Cure2–5 min (lamp)24–72 h
MixingNone1:1 by weight
Max layer~5mmup to 25mm
Best forPendants, earringsCoasters, embeds
5

Color, pour, cure

Color with mica or pigment if desired (start tiny). Pour slowly to the top of the cavity (resin domes a bit). Embed eye pins now. Pop surface bubbles with a quick pass of a BBQ lighter or by exhaling across the surface. UV: 2–5 min under the lamp (thick pieces cure in 5mm layers - light doesn't reach deep). Epoxy: cover loosely and wait.

Finish

6

Demold, trim, assemble

Flex the silicone to release. Trim flash with nail clippers, file smooth with 600-grit. For gloss, dip-coat in fresh resin and re-cure. Thread a jump ring through the embedded eye pin (or drill a small hole with a pin vise) and attach earring hooks or chains.

Troubleshooting

Silicone never cured

Cure inhibition on platinum-cure. Switch to tin-cure, or clean the master with isopropyl alcohol and dry fully before re-pouring.

Resin won't come out

Wait 24h after silicone cures before casting. For undercuts, flex the silicone firmly - it won't tear.

Bubbles inside the resin

Mixed or poured too fast, or the silicone mold itself has trapped bubbles. Mix and pour slowly, pop surface bubbles with a flame, or use a pressure pot for serious work.

Resin is sticky after curing

UV: cure longer and flip to cure the back (silicone blocks UV from below). Epoxy: bad mix ratio or room too cold (needs 21°C+).

Cast surface is rough/cloudy

The mold inherits the master's layer lines. Reprint at 0.08mm or sand the master, or coat with XTC-3D before molding. Dip-coat existing pieces in fresh resin for a glossy fix.

The silicone mold tore

Mold too thin (<10mm) or aggressive undercuts. Make the box larger next time. For severe undercuts, pour a two-part silicone mold (half at a time).

Cured resin yellows over time

Switch to non-yellowing resin. Surface yellowing can be sanded and re-coated; throughout-yellow can't be reversed.