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The Hardware
Technical specs on our 30+ active fragrances and vessel architecture. Deep dives into why we use glass, not tin.


SILENCE BEFORE THE NOISE.
What you are seeing in the clip to the right isn't just empty glass. It is the critical "Loadout Phase" of our manufacturing cycle here in Shadle. Before a single drop of wax hits 185°F, the hardware must pass a strict visual and thermal inspection. Most candle failures—tunneling, poor scent throw, shattered glass—happen because the maker rushed this specific step. At Brite & Bold, we don't rush. We calibrate. Here is the technical breakdown of the hardware you see on the ben
britebold
Dec 30, 20252 min read


Scent Profile: Fresh to Death
This isn't "Clean Linen." This is Fresh to Death . It is currently one of the highest-moving units in the lineup. The Breakdown: Top Notes: Clean White Powder, Sharp Ozone Base: Vibrant Violets, Fresh Cotton Blossoms Vibe: Scrubbing the air with sharp hits of clean white powder, vibrant violets, and crisp cotton blossoms. We formulated this specifically for people who are tired of weak, single-note fragrances. It fills the room without asking for permission. Grab it in
britebold
Dec 23, 20251 min read


Hardware Specs: Why We Don't Use Tins
You won't find travel tins in our lineup. Here is the technical breakdown of why we stick to glass. 1. Heat Management Metal tins get nuclear hot. They warp, they burn surfaces, and they feel cheap. Our glass vessels have the mass to handle the heat of the melt pool without compromising the structure. 2. The Weight Streetwear is about quality materials. The Heavy Hitter (4oz) feels substantial. The Statement Piece (15oz) is an anchor. We want the product to feel heavy in
britebold
Dec 23, 20251 min read
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