Oil lamp from a light bulb. Oil lamp

An oil lamp or candle is one of the oldest forms of light sources for mankind. According to Wikipedia, there are stone oil lamps that were used 10,000 to 15,000 years ago! Today we'll talk about how oil lamps work, what type of oil and wick is best to use, and how to make a beautiful oil lamp from a jar in just a few minutes!

Three reasons to fall in love with oil lamps:

  1. The lamp in a jar is simple to make but so attractive. Just two minutes is enough and a little vegetable oil and water!
  2. Such a lamp safer than candles. If oil lamp turns over, the flame immediately goes out due to oil and water. However, you should not leave the lamp unattended!
  3. Bright long burning. One tablespoon of oil can burn for two hours!

These oil lamps can be an inexpensive light source and are also great for dinner or party decorations!

How do oil lamps work?

The earliest oil lamps used vegetable oil as fuel, while later versions used kerosene or lamp oil, which was impregnated with a capillary wick. This version is made with vegetable oil.

What type of oil and wick should I use?

Lamps that use kerosene or lamp oil have specially made wicks. Long cotton wicks are not suitable for vegetable oil lamps because vegetable oils have a high viscosity.

Long wicks simply do not take up enough oil and go out. Floating wicks work great with all vegetable oils!

Materials:

  • large floating wicks
  • 1 tablespoon vegetable oil
  • jar or glass bottle
  • decorative elements (flowers, pine cones, pebbles, etc.)
  • herbs, spices or essential oils

Step by step instructions:

Step 1: Collect glass bottles and jars, fill them with flowers or other decorative elements. Fill with water.

Step 2: Pour a little vegetable oil on top until the oil forms a layer about half a centimeter thick.

Large floating wicks come with discs and small waxed wicks. Insert a piece of wick through the center hole in the disk and place it on top of the oil layer.

Now light your oil candle and enjoy the beautiful light!

Flowers and fruits will last a whole week in water.

Pine cones, pebbles, and beads are also great additions! Red viburnum berries, cranberries and paws coniferous species great for decoration.

To extinguish the flame, simply cover the candle with a jar lid. Floating wicks can be left inside.

After repeated use, the waxed wick will burn out, simply replace it with a small piece of pre-waxed wick that can be cut into small pieces. A floating disk can work for a very long time.

Some flowers will float, but you can keep them down with other decorative elements.

Add food coloring to water for a special effect!

Olive and sunflower oil burn cleanly, without smoke.

Artificial plants can also be used for decoration, just keep them away from flames.

The article was prepared based on materials from www.apieceofrainbow.com.

Kerosene and oil lamps were widely used at a time when electricity did not exist. But even today, in the event of a power outage, as well as during a hike or stay at the dacha, you can use an oil lamp. A rarity that was popular in ancient times will be difficult to find and purchase today, but you can learn how to make an oil lamp with your own hands.

For oil lamp lighting to be effective, certain conditions must be met:

  • Not just any oil will do in order for the wick to burn evenly and for a long time, and also brightly. In this case, you need to choose an oil intended for aromatic lamps and candles, or sewing machines, it is also good to use lamp oil. IN hiking conditions, in the absence of anything else, you can use vegetable.
  • The wick must have large diameter. You can even use rolled cotton wool.
  • A container that is too wide, such as a saucer, is more fire hazardous than a small one, especially when lighting an oil lamp inside a tent.

DIY oil lamp


A DIY oil lamp can be very useful in camping conditions to illuminate the area inside the tent. However, you need to know how to make it correctly.

The basis of such a lamp is oil and wick. To make a miniature oil lamp, you will need the following materials:

  1. Match
  2. Copper wire
  3. Wool thread, preferably thick
  4. Oil
  5. Tin stopper

A thick woolen thread will act as a wick, and the thicker it is, the better. It absorbs any substance well, be it liquid or oil, lifting this substance upward. The basis for the thread should be a support, which is used as a match, on which copper wire is wound in tight rings. When the match is completely wrapped in wire, it is removed from the loop. You should end up with a copper spiral, the end of which needs to be bent slightly to ensure stability. After this, you need to wind the thread tightly onto the resulting spiral from bottom to top, threading it between the rings. The end of the thread should remain free at the top; it needs to be fluffed up a little.

Next, you need to take a tin stopper and pour in a small amount of oil, enough for the thread wick to be saturated to the top. In addition to the cork, you can use any metal container in which you need to place the manufactured wick.

Another option for making an oil lamp is to use a regular light bulb. For this you will need:

  1. Old or new light bulb
  2. Cotton fabric wick
  3. Syringe
  4. Steel or copper wire
  5. Oil
  6. Tool set

The light bulb will serve as a container for oil with a wick. To prepare it, you need to make a hole in the base: hook the protruding contact of the lamp with pliers and pull it. After this, you need to remove the black polymer around the contact and everything else that was there from the glass bulb of the light bulb.

Next, you need to check the wick for suitability: set it on fire and look at the result. If it produces loose ash, then the wick will burn well. If the fibers begin to turn into something resembling plastic, the wick is not suitable for an oil lamp. You need to measure the required length of the wick so that it is completely immersed in the bulb from the lamp, protruding about 1 cm from it.

To fill the glass flask with oil, you can use a 10 ml syringe. When the oil in the flask runs out, you can always add it.


You need to make a holder for the wick from the wire. To do this, use pliers to bend the wire into a spiral with a wide base. You need to make a slight curve on top of the wire so that it holds onto the top of the bulb from the light bulb.

After making the base, the wick is soaked in oil and lowered inside the flask, secured with wire. If the cotton wick on the wire does not stick out about 1 cm from the bulb, it will create a lot of soot. The oil lamp is ready, you just need to light the wick and make sure to change the oil on time and tighten the wick as it burns. By the way, such a lamp will be an excellent interior decoration. But for this it is necessary that it be located on a stand. To do this, you can use a metal hanger or a piece of copper wire, twisting it into a wide spiral, and securing the light bulb to the top with electrical tape or double-sided tape.

Another option for making an oil lamp is to use a glass container and the bottom of an aluminum can. The concave part of the bottom is cut off from the can, in which two holes are made - for the wick and air outlet, in order to slightly reduce the buoyancy of the wick. A wick, for example, from a bandage, is threaded through one of the holes. It is moistened with oil, set on fire and lowered into a glass container with oil poured into it. You can make three or four wicks instead of one, but in this case you will have to make the float from the aluminum bottom more convex so that it does not fill with oil inside glass jar.

The advantages of a lamp inside a glass jar: the flame is not blown out by the wind and is protected from accidental overturning, it is convenient during transportation, and does not require constant supervision. And the use of several wicks allows you to adjust the brightness of the glow and the duration of the lamp.

We continue to look at recycling ideas :) We recently looked at ideas for using jars from baby food, like shades for a chandelier and candlesticks, and now let's see what else we can make from this available material. Enjoy your viewing :))

You can use any jar with a lid for this, decorate the outside at your discretion and fill plain oil or even a mixture of oil and water.

And in order not to constantly suffer with a cotton wick, which must be pushed further during combustion, then it is better for you to use fiberglass wick-cord. It does not burn, but conducts oil perfectly through itself.

You can fill a glass container with different colored oils and different densities, then you will get a beautiful color for the jar.

Pierce a metal jar with a nail, insert a wick and pour oil into the jar. Your oil candlestick is ready!

And we can even adapt a light bulb to this option.

And hereā€™s the idea for an aroma lamp :))

based on materials from the site putitinajar.com/crafts/mason_jar_oil_lamp/

And this is generally aerobatics :)) Beautiful sandstone or dolomite is drilled in several places, wicks are inserted, which are lowered into a container with oil from below.

Wrong side.

I hope you find this idea useful for implementing and using it to decorate these jars in various techniques. You can decoupage, you can paint with stained glass paints, you can use paper art, dot painting, glue all kinds of floral material, glass fragments, you can apply a mosaic or simply tint through a stencil, the main thing is that the decor does not catch fire, since after all we are dealing with fire. After all, the oil from the wick seeps and flows a little. Successful experiments to you!

Let me remind you of the previous post about using jars :)

There are water fittings in every home. In addition to the fact that they can be used for their intended purpose, you can do a variety of things with them. There are designers who use water fittings to create new masterpieces and decorative elements. Such decorative element we will try to create it now.

Let's watch the process of creating a beautiful and original oil lamp in the video:

So what do we need?
- Plumbing fittings;
- Tee;
- Adapter 3/4 to 1/2;
- Adapters 1/2 for hose;
- Rubber gasket;
- Cord made of natural fibers;
- Plumbing tape;
- Oil intended for lamps (kerosene can also be used);
- A kopeck is two rubles.


The materials have been collected, let's get to work. We take a penny and insert it into the adapter along with the rubber gasket.



Now you need to take care of the wick holders. To do this, we take 1/2 adapters for the hose, into which we insert our natural fiber cord. Such ropes cannot be purchased in every store, but you need to look hard to eventually find a cord made from natural fibers. The fact is that an identical cord made of artificial or synthetic fibers simply will not work, because synthetics melt and burn.


The wick holders are ready, which means that they can be installed in their places, namely in the tee.


All materials are ready. You can assemble our lamp. You can do this as shown in the picture, or you can get creative and create your own unique and inimitable lamp.


That's the whole simple process of making an oil lamp from water fittings. The finished lamp can be used like this, or you can take a little galvanized acid and give it a slightly rusty and tarnished look, which will make the lamp more colorful and stylish.


All that remains is to add oil and make sure that the tips of our wicks protrude about one or a couple of millimeters. Otherwise, the flame will be very large and may cause serious damage to the lamp and objects located nearby. It is also worth noting that the lamp will not have any mechanism that will allow you to adjust the flame, so it is better not to experiment with the length of the wicks.

How to make an oil lamp

An oil lamp is a homemade lamp that was used by our distant ancestors. The basis for it is oil and wick. Of course, the need for such a lamp has now disappeared, but it will still serve you in the countryside or may become interesting element interior decoration, especially if used aromatic oils. Making a miniature oil lamp is not that difficult.

To make a miniature oil lamp we will need:

  1. match
  2. copper wire
  3. thick wool thread
  4. oil
  5. tin stopper

The thread will serve as a wick. The thicker it is, the better. Any thread easily absorbs any liquid, and the laws of physics lift this liquid upward along the thread - this is what we will use. First you need to make a base for the thread - a column on which it will be wound. To do this, take a match and wrap it in a tight ring of wire.

Gradually, by winding the wire onto a match in a spiral, we obtain the basis for the future wick.

When we have wrapped almost the entire match, we remove it from the spiral. Leave a tail at the bottom - it is needed for stability. Copper wire in the best possible way Suitable for such hand-made art - it bends easily and is quite beautiful.

Now you need to wind the thread around this spiral.

From bottom to top, we wind the thread tightly in a spiral, threading it a little between the rings of the spiral. We leave a small end of the thread on top, fluffing it along the fibers. If this structure is placed in a container with oil at the bottom, then the oil, having soaked the thread, will rise to the top. This is what the tin stopper is for. Drop a little oil into it and place the wick inside.

The oil itself does not burn, but a wick soaked in it burns very well. Of course, not just any oil will do - you need to buy something in the store that is intended for aromatherapy lamps and candles. All that's left to do is set it on fire!

You don't have to use a cork - any will do metal container, into which you can pour a spoonful of oil and put the wick that we made.