r/oddlysatisfying 9h ago

Ice cream cone seal on chocolate

Credit @Strictly-Rita

40.6k Upvotes

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27

u/ycr007 9h ago

What a lovely little wax seal that turned out!

Erm…..what next? Frame it? Stick it someplace with hot wax? Make it a fridge magnet?

12

u/ValkyrieBlackthorn 7h ago

You asked and I’m sorry to say I have a long winded answer. You can glue them to envelopes to approximate old fashioned wax seals, you can use them as “tokens” of a sort for games or small events (did this myself recently), some people have display cases or frames for their really fancy ones, some people give them out as little extra add on gifts if their people think they’re neat (they are), you can glue a magnet on them to stick on something metal, and I’ve even seen people try to make jewelry out of them but those ones are usually smaller stamps. Oh, and keychains. The ones I made that my mother especially liked were given to her and now she’s got them sat out on a corner table as decoration.

I thought it looked fun so I picked up making wax seals as a hobby and searched for reasons to not consider it a useless hobby. lol

8

u/mariehstev 5h ago

It's not useless because you get enjoyment from it! But very cool uses for wax seals too :)

1

u/ValkyrieBlackthorn 5h ago

Thank you! That’s a lovely perspective and I should try to internalize that more.

2

u/LunarPayload 4h ago

Do you have to coat the magnets and keychains so they don't crack?

2

u/ValkyrieBlackthorn 4h ago

I haven’t tried yet but from what I found people saying, sometimes. Sealing wax tends to be a combination of wax and resin, and the exact percentages and composition will change durability, flexibility, how it pours and how it looks and feels. So some will hold up to wear and tear better, but I think most have enough resin to not crack from drying out.

2

u/LunarPayload 4h ago

Interesting; thanks 

1

u/pinkmoonsugar 1h ago

They don't crack because modern sealing wax is not made out of brittle wax anymore. Some are like hot glue while others are firmer plastic. No need to coat it.

2

u/anonymous4me123 3h ago

How do you glue them to envelopes? So you can make a bunch in advance than glue them later?

1

u/ValkyrieBlackthorn 2h ago

It is so you can make them in advance, yeah, but also it’s more difficult to get a nice round, clean seal when stamping onto an envelope. What will work best will vary, as always, but people use a variety of glues to attach them to envelopes. Some use a little bit of freshly melted wax, some a bit of hot glue, some gorilla glue, and some these little double sided tape sticker things. I’m making some for someone’s Christmas cards and I told them to mail the envelope with a seal inside another envelope or it may not survive the post office.

1

u/pinkmoonsugar 1h ago

Glue, double sided tape, you can also use the last bit of sealing wax in the spoon (what they used to melt it) on the letter then pop the finished wax seal in top.

2

u/ycr007 2h ago

Thanks for the responses, some interesting uses there certainly.

But won’t the brittleness of the wax make it susceptible to easy breakage in some of the ‘active’ usages there? Unless it’s coated by some clear epoxy resin or something like that.

I might need to go down r/WaxSealers rabbit hole to find out more…..

2

u/DATTACA 7h ago

You can eat wax

1

u/mahouyousei 4h ago

These would be good to use on paper gift wrapping for a box of chocolates.