Apple Butter Caramel Fragrance Oil Spotlight
We’ve got alluring apple aromas in abundance. Apple butter is an incredible spread made by slow cooking apples with cider, sugar, and spices until the delicious mixture reaches a butter-like consistency. I’m drooling just thinking about it. You can spread it on toast, eat it straight out of the jar, or bake it into a mouth-watering pie. Caramel is made by heating a variety of sugars, a bit of cream, and vanilla–another taste-bud-tempting treat. Mix the two together and you have sugar, spice, and everything nice. Tempt your tummy (don’t eat fragrance oil) and satisfy your sense of smell with this savory scent.
What Does Apple Butter Caramel Fragrance Oil Smell Like?
This fragrance is an amazing combination of the following aromatic notes to make apple butter caramel fragrance truly fantastic: McIntosh apple, steamed milk, pure sugar, caramel candy, toffee pudding, apple butter, fresh nutmeg, vanilla bean, and soft musk.
How Do Our Customers Use Apple Butter Caramel Fragrance Oil?
Candles! This amazing apple aroma performs perfectly in joy wax and wow wax, and is nice and strong in soy wax. It is not gel wax compatible. The maximum recommended usage percentage for this savory scent in vegetable waxes and paraffin wax is 10%. Our coloring suggestions for candles are to use six drops of red plus two drops brown liquid candle dye per four pounds of wax, or shred an ample amount of red and brown color block into your melted wax. Attempting to color your candles with crayons will clog the wick.
Soaps! This delicious bakery scent has a maximum recommended usage percentage of 5% in soaps, bath oils, bath gels, and cleaning products. The vanillin content of this fruit fragrance is 6.7%, so it will likely discolor your bath and body products. Our cold process soap testing found that cured CP soap made with Apple Butter Caramel fragrance discolored to brown. Otherwise it had a perfect pour: no acceleration, no ricing, and no separation. The scent retention is strong. If you’d like to try to prevent discoloration in your bath and body products, try using our Vanilla White Color Stabilizer. It may help prevent discoloration due to vanilla, but you are responsible for the results in your final product. Our coloring suggestions for bath and body products are to use red soap colorant in the amount that satisfies you. (Never use candle dye in any body products.)
We’ve got this cool 3D Apple Mold that you could use to make soaps or candles. If there’s one thing I know about our customers, it’s that they’re creative, crafty! See what kind of fun things you can come up with; share pictures with us on Facebook if your heart desires.
Lotions and perfumes! This sweet scent performed perfectly in perfumes and the maximum recommended usage percentage for perfumes and lotions is 5%.
Room scents! The maximum recommended usage percentage for this awesome apple aura in incense and potpourri is 50%. The delicious scent comes across nice and strong in aroma beads.