Cold throw vs hot throw in plain language
Time to read: 20 minutes · Materials: your nose and two labeled jars
Cold throw is what you smell from an unlit candle. Hot throw is what fills the room while the wick is lit. They are related but not the same signal: some oils read loud cold and quiet hot, especially heavy vanillas that need heat to unlock.
| Check | Cold throw | Hot throw |
|---|---|---|
| When | After cure, lid off, room temperature | After full melt pool at steady flame |
| Common mistake | Judging at the pour line | Sniffing too close to the flame |
At the studio we label batches with pour date and retest at day three and day fourteen. Citrus can dominate early cold throw, then yield space to mid notes—document the shift so you do not “fix” a blend that only needed time.
Master note: I smell hot throw from chair height, not standing over the jar; that matches how scent sits in a dining room.
Deepen with Scent Notes Balancing Session. More guides.