last fall i purchased some pretty dirty beeswax cappings from a side liner beek in minnesota. the beek takes his cappings, frame scrapings and throws them in a big solar melter, but does not wash the cappings or filter, and the solar unit is aluminum, so the wax may have reacted a bit to this? not sure. he just takes and breaks the piles of melted wax out and throws the chunks in 5 gallon pails. so what i knew i had was wax with honey, propolis, bee parts, dirt, and whatever else in it. i normally run all my wax through a solar melter, but i have a filtering method that gives me very clean wax.
this winter i took his wax and boiled it on the stove, it was pretty dirty stuff and full of honey residue. i gave up. also the wax was a very dark tan leathery color. this spring, i took the round chunks, and square chunks i tried to filter last fall, and ran all of the wax through my solar melter to get all the gunk out. for some of it i was still not happy with the color, so i decided to try and bleach the wax lighter. also, i just wanted to do an experiment on how light i could get this wax.
this is a pic of what i started with after boiling on the stove. the picture does not really show how leathery dark brown this wax was:
maybe this one one of the lighter chunks.........
so what i did was cut the round blocks and square blocks i had filtered up into small chunks with a chisel. i used aluminum square weber grill pans or bake pans to place the chunks in. i took a window and a jury rigged 2 inch plywood outer cover someone made and gave to me for some reason........
(well, i know why, i hoard bees and equipment and it was free........
) put some window/door tape on the top of it, set the weber pans with wax in the free jury rigged homemade sort of outer cover, set the window on top, pressed down to seal it to the strip and shallow box and placed the box in the sun. i wish i would have put a thermometer inside the box, but i didn't.
after about a week in june, this was the color of the wax bleached by the sun:
i bleached some of his other wax to a light yellow color, (real pretty stuff) not leaving it out in the sun so long.
pretty cool!
if you are looking to lighten wax, or bleach it, the sun works well! i was sort of amazed!