Price's Candles, founded in 1830,[1] is an importer and retailer of candles headquartered in Bedford, England. The company holds the royal warrant of appointment for the supply of candles and is one of the largest candle suppliers in the United Kingdom.
History
Royal warrant
In 1840, Price's stearin 'composite' candles, produced from a mixture of refined tallow and coconut oil,[2] gained prominence around the time of Queen Victoria's wedding. Traditionally, households would burn a candle in their front room windows on the evening of a monarch's wedding.
Price's Patent Candle has maintained a documented association with the British Royal Household since the mid 19th century. The introduction of the company's composite candle took place in 1840, the year of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert's wedding. Price's Patent Candle has held the royal warrant—either in its name or through its subsidiaries Francis Tucker and Charles Farris—since the 1850s. Currently, it holds a royal warrant[3] in its name for Her Majesty the Queen. The status as a warrant holder means that it supplies candles for all royal state occasions, such as coronations, weddings, lyings-in-state, and funerals.
Innovations
Technological
There was a potential market in England for a mid-priced candle that gave a brighter, cleaner light than tallow, but was not as expensive as beeswax. William Wilson and his partner discovered a new raw material and a scientific process in 1830 that allowed them to manufacture such a candle. The firm they set up, Edward Price and Co., would make candles from coconut. Wilson took out a license on an 1829 patent for the hydraulic separation of coconut fats. The partners built a candle factory at Vauxhall on the Thames in South West London, a crushing mill just upriver at Battersea, and invested in 1,000 acres of coconut plantation in Sri Lanka. The initial results were not very successful, but the infant company had a couple of good breaks: in 1831 the candle tax was abolished and by 1835 it had developed better chemical processes to obtain solid fats.
In the 1820s a French chemist, Michel Eugène Chevreul, published his research on fatty acids. By mixing a strong alkali with vegetable or animal fats he discovered that the solution separated into liquid and solid components. This technique, known as saponification, was already used by soap makers, but nobody had employed it for candle manufacture. William Wilson's son, George, experimented with this process by adding a further distillation using a vacuum or high-pressure steam he improved Chevreuil's chemistry. Price's were now able to refine tallow and vegetable oils to produce a harder, pure white fat called stearin. Candles made from this burned brightly without smoke or smell.
Price's Candles overseas
By 1900, Price's Patent Candle was producing 130 differently named and specified sizes of candle, any one of which could, in theory, be manufactured in 60 different permutations of material, colour, and hardness; the company regularly held 2,000 different standard candle products in stock. Candles were created for many needs: carriages, pianos, dining rooms, bedrooms, servants' bedrooms (that only lasted 30 minutes), and photographic darkrooms. They also made "The Burglar's Horror!" nightlight (to be lit in every front and back window and designed to scare off criminals) and candles for coal miners, the navy, engineers, and emigration ships. To compete with other sources of light, the design of the candles were changed. Tapered Venetians, spirals, flutes, and candles with self-fitting ends in many colours replaced the utilitarian white, cylindrical products of the mid-century. In the 1920s and 1930s, Price's Patent Candle designed 'Art-Deco' candles and coordinated candlesticks as a luxury range and appealed to the growing children's market with Noah's Ark nightlight holders, birthday cake candles, and a range of Walt Disney candle merchandise.
In 1910, Price's Patent Candle acquired its first overseas factories in Johannesburg and by 1915 the company owned six factories in South Africa, Shanghai and Chile. Price's Patent Candle went on to construct factories in Rhodesia, Morocco, Pakistan, New Zealand and Sri Lanka.
Price's Candles resurgence
After its interlude as a public company, Price's Patent Candles became a privately owned business. Turnover increased five-fold between 1991 and 1998, and the company is once again the largest British-owned candlemaker with over 300 employees. In 2001 Price's Patent Candles[5] relocated their headquarters to Bedford, Bedfordshire, incorporating a warehouse where they remain today. 2003 saw the acquisition of Price's Patent Candle by the Italian-owned company Sgarbi which in turn sold on to another Italian company SER[6] in 2004. The majority of Price's Patent Candle candle manufacturing is now done at SER's headquarters in Turin with the sales and distribution both nationally and internationally still coordinated from Bedford.
In a consumer-led market where 80% of candle sales are now purely decorative, the company has focused on new ranges of perfumed and essential oil candles and aromatherapy products.
Awards
Price's Candles won best display stand at a 2019 Home Hardware trade show.[7]
External links
References
- Price's Patent Candles Limited www.royalwarrant.org, retrieved 2025-11-11^
- J. M Cocking. Price's Patent Candles: A Family Story The Book Guild., 1997^
- Price's Patent Candles Ltd www.royalwarrant.org, retrieved 2021-01-26^