Cheap Pillar Candles


Candle
Candle (Photo credit: slgckgc)
Franciscan Madeira Candle Holder 1
Franciscan Madeira Candle Holder 1 (Photo credit: Thrift Store Addict)
SIZEOUR PRICEADD TO CART
2x3 $1.05ea
2x4 $1.25ea
2x6 $2.00ea
2x9 $3.35ea

3x3 $2.10ea
3x6 $3.80ea
3x9 $5.20ea

4x4 $8.50ea
4x6 $10.50ea
** CHEAPER PER PIECE THAN OUR COMPETITORS **
Cheap Pillar Candles does not have to be cheap quality candles! Click here to compare ours to much of what is out there at our prices. If you are looking for the utmost economical way to light up your wedding or important event without sacrificing quality, look no further! Are you planning a wedding on a budget? Consider us for your wedding candles or events shopping.
We can help you stay within your budget with our manufacturer-direct pricing. Our huge discounts are offered to everyone from events coordinators to restaurants, brides-to-be and everyone in between.
If you have a color scheme, we have the colors to compliment it! Try our interactive color-scaper to try out different color combinations. Don't confuse our discount candles to mean cheap candles! Our candles are hand-poured using the finest ingredients available and are completely colored throughout to ensure the same vivid color lasts to the very end. Your satisfaction is guaranteed!
Our unscented solid round collection is offered in 49 imaginative candle colors and 9 sizes! Select from slender 2 inch diameter candles, our popular 3 inch diameter and hard to find 4 inch diameter candles. Now, getcheap votive candles in colors to match our pillar candles!
SIZES AVAILABLE: 2X3, 2X4, 2X6, 2X9, 3X3, 3X6, 3X9, 4X4, 4X6

Enhanced by Zemanta

We pass the savings on to you! Wholesale with no minimum order or dollar amounts and never a handling fee!


An almost burnt-down lit candle on a candle ho...
An almost burnt-down lit candle on a candle holder. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
    Welcome to MillCreek Soy Wax Candle Supply, where you will find everything you need to make beautiful soy candles, soy bath and body products and more. Whether you are new to candle making or an established candle making business looking for a great deal on wholesale candle and bath and body supplies, we invite you to kick back and enjoy browsing and shopping our secure site!

MillCreek Soy Wax Candle Supply offers only the highest quality, premium uncut fragrance oils, soy wax and supplies at wholesale prices. Each and every fragrance oil is tested in MillCreek Soy Wax to insure an excellent scent throw.

We carry Soy Wax, Only Premium Fragrance OilsWicksColor DyesCandle Kits and information on How to Make Soy Wax Candles, and more for all your candle making needs. See our exclusive Bath & Body line by clicking the link at left.
MillCreek's repeat customer base has grown by leaps and bounds--also a testament to our products and service. Give MillCreek a try and see for yourself. MillCreek offers the best in candle making and bath and body supplies, service and knowledgeable customer support!  Thanks for stopping in!
For a luxurious spa experience try MillCreek's very popular exclusive line of salon quality Soy Lotion,
Gel Soap, Body and or Linen Bases and Soy Silky Shampoo and Conditioner. Just mix fragrance oil with base; that's it!  MillCreek's Soy Bases make great additions to your soy line. See our Bath & Body Page.

Enhanced by Zemanta

candles


candles

LONDON, ENGLAND - MARCH 24:  A woman leaves Ha...
LONDON, ENGLAND - MARCH 24: A woman leaves Harvey Nichols department store in Knightsbridge on March 24, 2011 in London, England. Founded in 1813 as a linen shop, the brand now has stores all over the world selling luxury clothing, accessories and food. Millions of tourists are expected to visit London for the wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton in April 2011 and the Olympic Games in 2012. (Image credit: Getty Images via @daylife)

Green-candles
Green-candles (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
christmas candles
christmas candles (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Enhanced by Zemanta

Israel wants Egypt's Islamist president to visit


Egypt's President Mohamed Mursi smiles during a meeting with IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde at the Presidential Palace in Cairo, August 22, 2012. REUTERS/Amr Abdallah Dalsh
JERUSALEM | Tue Aug 28, 2012 10:55am EDT
(Reuters) - Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman said on Tuesday he hoped Egypt's new Islamist President Mohamed Mursi would soon visit the Jewish state to back up his reassuring words.
Mursi told Reuters in an interview on Monday he would pursue a "balanced" foreign policy and indicated that Israel's peace treaty with Egypt was safe.
"We definitely hope to see President Mursi receive official Israeli representatives in the near future. We want to see him interviewed by the Israeli media. We want to see him visit Jerusalem as a guest of President (Shimon) Peres in Israel," the ultranationalist Lieberman told a legal conference in Tel Aviv.
Mursi's Muslim Brotherhood movement describes Israel as a racist and expansionist state. But the president resigned from it upon taking power after his election victory in June and he has avoided inflammatory language since.
Mursi's emphasis on balance in the interview with Reuters suggested he would seek a less explicitly pro-American role for Egypt in the region than under the ousted Hosni Mubarak. But he has also been at pains to reassure traditional allies.
Egypt and Israel made peace in 1979 after fighting four wars. Mubarak served for decades as a loyal U.S. ally and guarantor of Egypt's status as the first Arab country to sign a treaty with Israel. Relations have remained cool despite the treaty, which is deeply unpopular with many Egyptians.
Lieberman said Mursi's words of reassurance were pleasing but he needed to do more.
Without mentioning Israel by name, Mursi indicated that Egypt's neighbor had nothing to fear from a new military campaign in the Sinai Peninsula, which he ordered after gunmen attacked an Egyptian border post, killed 16 guards and tried to storm across the frontier into Israel.
"I was happy to hear what ... Mursi said on Egypt's commitment to peace with Israel, the Camp David accords and the fight against terror," Lieberman said.
"It's a very important message. But whoever speaks of peace and stability must understand that this can't just be abstract and hypothetical. Peace also has tangible expressions. Peace is not telepathic."
Lieberman drew a rebuke from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu last week for suggesting Palestinians should vote out their president to help revive peace efforts.
Lieberman urged the Palestinians to hold a long-delayed election to choose "a new, legitimate, hopefully realistic" leadership that can "bring progress with Israel".
Netanyahu swiftly distanced himself from the comments saying that they did "not correctly represent the position of the prime minister or of the government as a whole".
Peace negotiations have been suspended for nearly two years.
(Writing by Ori Lewis; Editing by Alistair Lyon)

JERUSALEM, ISRAEL - OCTOBER 10:  Israeli Forei...
JERUSALEM, ISRAEL - OCTOBER 10: Israeli Foreign Minister Avigdor Lieberman speaks to the press prior to the weekly cabinet meeting on October 10, 2010 in Jerusalem, Israel. Netanyahu if facing increased pressure from the U.S. to renew the 10-month freeze on settlement construction in the West Bank, an issue opposed by many of the coalition government members. He also gave his support to Israel's proposed citizenship oath, which would require all non-Jewish citizens to vow their allegiance to the State of Israel as a ''Jewish and democratic state''. (Image credit: Getty Images via @daylife)
Enhanced by Zemanta

Exclusive: New Egypt leader steps out on world stage seeking "balance"


Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi talks during an interview with Reuters at the Presidential palace in Cairo, August 27, 2012. REUTERS/Asmaa Waguih
CAIRO | Mon Aug 27, 2012 7:21pm EDT
(Reuters) - Egypt's new Islamist president said on Monday he would pursue a "balanced" foreign policy, reassuring Israel its peace treaty was safe, hinting at a new approach to Iran and calling on Bashar al-Assad's allies to help lever the Syrian leader out.
Mohamed Mursi, who was elected in June and consolidated his power this month by dismissing top military leaders, is seeking to introduce himself to a wider world ahead of a trip to Iran - the first by an Egyptian leader in three decades - and China.
"Egypt is now a civilian state ... a national, democratic, constitutional, modern state," he told Reuters in his first interview with an international news organization since taking office as the candidate of the once-banned Muslim Brotherhood.
"International relations between all states are open and the basis for all relations is balance. We are not against anyone but we are for achieving our interests," said the U.S.-educated engineer, appearing confident and assertive in the marble-lined presidential palace.
The first leader Egyptians have elected in a 5,000-year history dating back to the pharaohs, he spoke in a room for visiting dignitaries surrounded by monarchy-era furniture, oil paintings and a grand tapestry on the wall.
Mursi, 61, came to power after the fall of Hosni Mubarak, who served for decades as a loyal U.S. ally and the guarantor of Egypt's status as the first Arab country to make peace with Israel.
His emphasis on balance suggests he is seeking a less explicitly pro-American role in the region, but he has also been at pains to reassure traditional allies.
Mursi's Brotherhood describes Israel as a racist and expansionist state, but he resigned from it on taking power and has avoided inflammatory language. He repeated his position that Egypt will continue to abide by international treaties, including its 1979 peace deal.
Without mentioning Israel by name, he indicated Egypt's neighbor had nothing to fear from a new military campaign in the Sinai Peninsula, which he ordered after gunmen attacked an Egyptian border post, killed 16 guards and tried to burst across the frontier into Israel.
"Egypt is practicing its very normal role on its soil and does not threaten anyone and there should not be any kind of international or regional concerns at all from the presence of Egyptian security forces," he said, referring to the extra police, army and other forces moved to the area.
The military campaign was in "full respect to international treaties", he said. The Egypt-Israel peace deal includes limits on Egyptian military deployment in Sinai.
Officials in Israel, already concerned that Egypt's Islamists will support the Brotherhood-offshoot Hamas in Gaza, have voiced worries about Egypt's build-up of heavy armor in Sinai to quash militants.
Mursi would not say if he would meet Israeli officials. Mubarak regularly received top officials although only went to Israel once for a funeral.
In an effort to increase Egypt's role in regional affairs, Mursi has called for dialogue between Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Iran to find a way to stop the bloodshed in Syria. Notably, the initiative has been welcomed by Iran, the only country in the group that supports Assad.
During his interview, Mursi gave a particularly strong call for Assad to be removed from power, suggesting that he is comfortable taking a high profile role in regional affairs. It is a message he will take on his trip to Iran and China, which, along with Russia, are the main countries backing Assad.
"Now is the time to stop this bloodshed and for the Syrian people to regain their full rights and for this regime that kills its people to disappear from the scene," Mursi said.
"There is no room to talk about reform, but the discussion is about change," Mursi said, adding Egypt had repeated that "the friends of the Syrian people in China and Russia and other states" need to back ordinary Syrians. However, Mursi said he opposed foreign military action in Syria "in any form".
FIRST VISIT TO IRAN
In what could be an important sign of a shift in the region, Mursi's visit to Iran this week will be the first by an Egyptian leader since Iran's 1979 Islamic revolution. The two countries broke off diplomatic relations at the time over Egypt's support for the ousted Iranian Shah and its peace with Israel, and have yet to formally restore ties.
Officially, Mursi's visit is to attend a summit of the 120-nation Non-Aligned Movement, and he would not be drawn on whether Egypt would resume full diplomatic ties with Iran.
Asked whether he saw a threat from Iran, whose nuclear program has sparked fears in the West and Israeli warnings that it could consider a military action, Mursi said: "We see that all the countries in the region need stability and peaceful co-existence with each other. This cannot be achieved with wars but through political work and special relations between the countries of the region."
After Iran, Mursi will travel in September to the United States, which still gives the Egyptian military $1.3 billion in aid a year.
Asked how the outcome of the U.S. election in November might change ties, Mursi said Egypt works with the United States as "a stable institution" rather than dealing with personalities.
TRANSFORMATION
Stocky and well-dressed, Mursi spoke in good humor in the palace where Mubarak held court for decades.
Criticized at the start of his election campaign as a stiff politician who seemed more of a Brotherhood functionary than statesman-in-waiting, he has warmed to the role. His dramatic move against the army on August 12 stamped his authority on the nation far more quickly than many had expected.
Mursi's rise to the presidency is not only a transformation for Egypt but also for him personally, climbing from a poor Nile Delta village to study in California before joining the Brotherhood. Like many members of the group, he was jailed for periods under Mubarak. They have swapped places and the 83-year-old former president is now serving life in jail.
Mursi sealed his rise to power this month with his audacious move to pension off military leaders who had ruled the country during the long transition after Mubarak was toppled last year. In his interview, he took care to praise the army in its transitional role and describe it as part of Egypt's "national fabric."
Liberals worry that the rise of Mursi and his Brotherhood group could lead to the imposition of Islamic sharia law, which they fear will impose social restrictions in a country where a tenth of the 82 million people are Christians and tourist visits to its beaches and pharaonic ruins are a vital source of income.
Mursi said tourism would grow under his rule.
When asked whether the new constitution, now being drawn up by an assembly before being put to the nation on a referendum, would seek to implement the Islamic code, he said it was up to the Egyptian people to decide.
(Additional reporting by Marwa Awad and Patrick Werr; Writing by Edmund Blair and Samia Nakhoul; Editing by Peter Graff)

Egypt's president rules out currency devaluation


Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi talks during an interview with Reuters at the Presidential palace in Cairo, August 27, 2012. REUTERS-Asmaa Waguih
CAIRO | Tue Aug 28, 2012 4:53am EDT
(Reuters) - Egypt's new president said on Monday he would not impose new taxes or devalue the country's currency and that his government would rely instead on investment, tourism and exports to fix an economy ravaged by a year and a half of political turmoil.
Mohamed Mursi, 61, has a window of opportunity to push through economic change while he still commands political goodwill 50 days into his tenure as Egypt's first freely elected president, economists say.
Yet he must tread carefully to avoid angering a population that rose up to oust Hosni Mubarak last year partly because of high inflation and the widespread belief that the fast economic growth in the last years of the former president's rule was not reaching the poor.
Among measures that have been proposed by economists are a reduction in the value of the currency, which has fallen by only 5 percent over the last 18 months despite the drop in demand from tourists and investors.
But asked if his government had any thought of devaluing the Egyptian pound, Mursi said: "No. Definitely not. This is completely out of the question."
Mursi was speaking to Reuters in his first interview with an international news organization hours before leaving for China, where he hopes to attract investment and improve economic ties. Next month he flies to the United States on a similar mission.
"I am seeking out the interests of the Egyptian people in the east and the west. I will go wherever these may be," Mursi said, speaking from the ground floor of the presidential palace.
"The interests of the Egyptian people require that we balance our relations with the whole world."
The anti-Mubarak uprising and its aftermath chased away both tourists and foreign investors, two of Egypt's main sources of foreign exchange, putting pressure on the currency and helping to widen an already swollen budget deficit.
Mursi's officials acknowledge the challenge. They say Egypt needs to create 700,000 new jobs a year, a target that will require growth of 6 percent a year or more. That level had been achieved in the last years of Mubarak's rule, but stalled after he was toppled.
The government last week formally asked the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for a $4.8 billion loan to plug the financing gap in its budget and balance of payments.
In the last three months, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the Jeddah-based Islamic Development Bank have pledged Egypt more than $5 billion to help it stave off a balance of payments crisis, but the money will not provide a long-term fix for a hard-pressed nation of 82 million people.
A weaker pound would encourage exports and stop a drain on foreign reserves, which have fallen by more than half since the uprising, to $14.5 billion. Yet it would make tea, sugar and other imports bought by the poor even more expensive. Wheat, a big import and their main staple, is heavily subsidized.
NO TAXES
Mursi also ruled out any new taxes, at least in the short term. "There are no new taxes that will be imposed on the Egyptian people during this period," Mursi said.
"The tax system needs reviewing so that government support reaches those who need it, not those who don't," Mursi said. "There is a gradual plan so that taxpayers bear their true responsibility and pay what they truly owe."
These, he added, would be revisions and not new taxes.
"I am not talking about a sudden law that would impose a tax on the people to pay new taxes without study. We want to reduce the burden on the most impoverished. We want to support the poor and needy," he said.
The deficit in the new, 2012/13 budget is equivalent to 25 percent of total spending. The government has been relying on local banks for finance, but these banks have run low on funds to lend. This has pushed interest rates on some treasury bills up to almost 16 percent, further widening the deficit.
"We are trying by all means possible ... to reduce this deficit, and we envisage that within a few years, within three to five years, this deficit may decrease by a tangible amount.
"The situation now is more stable. The amount of reserves now at the central bank is above the limit of fear, above the red line," he said.
"The main axis is investment, encouraging investors, tourism, foreign trade, exports. That is what we are aiming for more than loans."
(Additional reporting by Samia Nakhoul and Edmund Blair; Writing by Patrick Werr and Marwa Awad; Editing by Michael Roddy)

The euro remained firm while Asian shares steadied on


A man looks at an electronic board displaying share prices outside a brokerage in Tokyo July 25, 2012. REUTERS/Yuriko Nakao/Files
TOKYO | Wed Aug 29, 2012 6:43am IST
(Reuters) - The euro remained firm while Asian shares steadied on Wednesday as investors awaited U.S. Fed chairman Ben Bernanke's Friday speech for signs of whether the bank will opt for more monetary stimulus and a European Central Bank policy meeting next week.
The euro rose to an eight-week high against the Australian dollar at A$1.2123 as investors clung to optimism for Europe taking positive steps to tackle its debt crisis. The euro
traded at $1.2566 on the U.S. dollar, hovering near a seven-week high of $1.2590 hit last week.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan were little changed, after hitting a three-week low on Tuesday, and the Nikkei stock average opened up 0.1 percent after closing at its lowest level in two weeks.
All eyes are fixed on Bernanke's speech on Friday at an annual Jackson Hole, Wyoming, meeting of central bankers and economists, which precedes the Fed's September 12-13 policy meeting. He has used the event in the previous two years to signal the Fed's easy policy intentions.
Fed policymakers have not agreed at this point to a new round of stimulus, Dallas Federal Reserve Bank President Richard Fisher told Reuters in a phone interview on Tuesday.
"In terms of further easing, nothing has been decided," said Fisher, a non-voting member on the Fed this year. "Nothing is predestined.
Investors have become less certain of getting any policy hint from Bernanke this week or strong monetary stimulus from the Fed's meeting next month, as data released over the past month has generally pointed to a modest U.S. recovery.
Tuesday's Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller housing price index
showed home prices rose for a fifth month in a row in June, but consumer confidence reached its lowest in nine months in August. A key jobs data due early in September could still revive expectations for a powerful easing if numbers were weak.
Official portrait of Federal Reserve Chairman ...
Official portrait of Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
"We don't believe that Bernanke will pre-commit the Fed at the JH conference (especially given the important upcoming Payrolls release on 7 September)," Societe Generale said in a research note.
"In fact, Bernanke may use the opportunity to highlight the limitations of what central banks can do. Thus, there is a risk that markets (especially the equity markets) will react with disappointment," it added.
MORE HOPEFUL ON EUROPE
Hopes remain relatively firm for the European Central Bank to soon unveil measures to ease borrowing stress in struggling countries such as Spain and Italy.
ECB President Mario Draghi cancelled his appearance at the Jackson Hole venue due to a heavy workload as he gears up for the bank's critical policy-setting meeting on September 6, with markets looking for details of a new bond-buying plan.
Such expectations have helped reduce borrowing costs especially at the shorter end of the yield curve, offsetting concerns over Spain's fiscal woes.
Spain's most economically important region, Catalonia, said it needed a major rescue from Madrid, refuelling fears the country may soon have to ask for a European rescue package to reduce its debt costs as the austerity measures, aimed at slashing the public deficit, push its economy deeper into recession.
English: President Barack Obama confers with F...
English: President Barack Obama confers with Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke following their meeting at the White House. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
"The euro continued grinding higher as the market likely continued to square underweight Euro positions ahead of an imminent European policy response," Barclays Capital analysts said in a note.
"But policy action does not necessarily translate into more growth," they said, adding that one risk that remains is elevated earnings estimates.
Oil prices fell, with U.S. crude down 0.2 percent at $96.11 a barrel and Brent down 0.2 percent at $112.37.
Oil rose on Tuesday as Hurricane Isaac approached the U.S. Gulf Coast, forcing companies in the region to close down oil production platforms and refineries.
Late on Tuesday, Group of Seven finance ministers issued a statement urging oil-producing countries to raise output to ensure the market is well supplied, while warning that Western nations were ready to tap strategic oil reserves to offset rising prices that could hurt global growth.
(Editing by Michael Perry)

Enhanced by Zemanta