Anonymous wrote:I had a friend whose house burned down from candles so I rarely use them.
Candles were lit. Family went to Christmas Eve services. Family did not extinguish candles when the left the home. When they returned from church their house was burning down.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had a friend whose house burned down from candles so I rarely use them.
Candles were lit. Family went to Christmas Eve services. Family did not extinguish candles when the left the home. When they returned from church their house was burning down.
We were on the deck at my mom's house and DH looked inside and saw that a candle had somehow caught the reusable target bag on fire. We have no idea how it happened. The bag wasn't over the candle at all when my mom lit it and it wasn't a new candle so it wasn't like the flame was high. We figured the air shift from opening and closing the patio door just made the bag or handle fall over. Definitely quite scary and could have been bad!
Anonymous wrote:I had a friend whose house burned down from candles so I rarely use them.
Candles were lit. Family went to Christmas Eve services. Family did not extinguish candles when the left the home. When they returned from church their house was burning down.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I use and gift candles (for birthdays, not hostess) but they're $70+ brands and I'm pretty picky about them.
Wow, $70 candles.
Anonymous wrote:I use and gift candles (for birthdays, not hostess) but they're $70+ brands and I'm pretty picky about them.
Anonymous wrote:I had a friend whose house burned down from candles so I rarely use them.
Candles were lit. Family went to Christmas Eve services. Family did not extinguish candles when the left the home. When they returned from church their house was burning down.
Anonymous wrote:I light candles quite a bit in the fall and winter, when I’m trying to create a cozy, Hygge-type atmosphere inside my house.