Table of Contents >> Show >> Hide
- What Are Greentree Home 16-Inch Square Tapers?
- Why the Square Shape Looks So Good
- Beeswax 101: What Makes It Special?
- Picking a Color (Because “Natural” Isn’t Your Only Personality)
- How to Choose the Right Candle Holders
- How to Burn Square Tapers So They Look Gorgeous (Not Chaotic)
- Troubleshooting: “Why Is My Candle Dripping/Smoking/Being Weird?”
- Where These Candles Shine: Styling Ideas You Can Steal
- Are They Worth It? (A Quick Reality Check)
- FAQ
- Real-World Experiences With 16-Inch Square Tapers ()
Some candles are background noisenice, but forgettable. The Greentree Home 16-inch Square Tapers are not those candles.
These are the “main character” candles: tall, architectural, and just dramatic enough to make a Tuesday pasta night feel like a magazine spread
(even if you’re wearing sweatpants that have seen things).
In this guide, we’ll break down what these square taper candles are, why they look so striking, how to burn them cleanly and safely, and how to
style them so your home says “intentional” instead of “I bought this five minutes before guests arrived.”
What Are Greentree Home 16-Inch Square Tapers?
The 16-inch Square Tapers are tall beeswax taper candles with a distinct square (obelisk-like) profile. Instead of the classic round
taper silhouette, they look like tiny stone pillarsonly warmer, glowier, and far less likely to require a structural engineer.
Quick specs (the stuff you actually want to know)
- Height: 16 inches
- Shape: square taper / obelisk profile
- Wax: 100% North American beeswax
- Sold as: a pair (typically boxed for gifting)
- Burn time: roughly 14–16 hours per candle (varies with conditions)
- Footprint: about 1.25″ x 1.25″ with a standard-ish taper base around 7/8″
- Made in: New York State, hand-finished
The brand often describes these as a taller, more robust sibling to their 12-inch square versionsame idea, more presence. If you love candlelight
but also love bold lines and clean geometry, this is your lane.
Why the Square Shape Looks So Good
Round tapers whisper. Square tapers declare. The geometry catches light differently, giving you crisp edges and subtle shadow playlike a tiny
art installation that also happens to be functional.
The “tiny turrets” effect
Here’s the fun part: as square tapers burn down, they can form little ridges and corners that look like miniature turrets. It’s strangely charming
like your candle is building a small castle while politely lighting your dinner.
Practical note: any candle’s burn behavior depends on airflow, wick length, and holder stability. But with these, the sculptural melt pattern is part
of the appeal. You’re not just buying “a candle.” You’re buying ambience and a slow-motion art project.
Beeswax 101: What Makes It Special?
Beeswax is a natural wax produced by honeybees. In candle form, it’s prized for its warm, golden glow and a gentle natural aromaoften described as
honey-like or lightly “sunny,” even when there’s no added fragrance.
Why people choose beeswax over other waxes
- Low added fragrance: Great if you want candlelight without your living room smelling like “Winter Pine Meadow Cookie Blizzard.”
- Slow, steady burn potential: Beeswax can burn for a long time when the wick and environment are dialed in.
- Clean-looking flame (when burned correctly): Less smoke and soot risk compared with poorly burned candles of any type.
- Giftability: Beeswax reads “premium” without being try-hard.
About the “cleans the air” claim (let’s be grown-ups)
You may see marketing language suggesting beeswax candles “clean” or “purify” air. Here’s the balanced take:
there isn’t strong scientific evidence that burning beeswax meaningfully purifies indoor air in a measurable way.
What is true is that any candle can create smoke or soot if it’s burned in a draft, with an overlong wick, or too close to flammablesso
how you burn matters more than the vibe copy on the product page.
Translation: enjoy the glow, enjoy the natural wax, and still crack a window once in a while. Your lungs didn’t sign up for a Victorian novel.
Picking a Color (Because “Natural” Isn’t Your Only Personality)
One reason these candles show up in design-forward shops is the color palette. Depending on the retailer and season, you’ll see options like
Natural, Cream, Black, and moodier shades (think antique olive, bittersweet, espresso, burnt amber,
plum, champagne, and more).
Easy color-styling wins
- Natural/Cream: timeless, soft, and works with basically everything.
- Black: modern, graphic, and looks incredible in brass or matte ceramic holders.
- Earth tones: perfect for fall tables, rustic linens, terracotta, and wood.
- Unexpected color: try one bold pair for a poplike lipstick for your dining table.
How to Choose the Right Candle Holders
The 16-inch height is a feature, not a suggestionso pick holders that feel stable and slightly heavy. You want “confident column,” not “wobbly
giraffe on skates.”
Fit matters: base size and taper cups
These tapers are designed for standard taper holders (commonly around a 7/8″ cup). If your holder is slightly loose, you can snug the base with
a small amount of candle wax (or a carefully wrapped bit of foil) so the candle stands straight. If your holder is tight, gently warm the base
between your hands and very lightly shave or smoothdon’t force it.
Height + safety = common sense math
- Keep tall tapers away from curtains, shelves, and anything that can catch fire.
- Use holders on a heat-resistant, stable surface.
- Don’t place them where pets can tail-swipe your entire vibe into the floor.
How to Burn Square Tapers So They Look Gorgeous (Not Chaotic)
The best candle burners aren’t “candle whisperers.” They just do three boring things consistently. And yes, boring things are how you get the
cinematic glow.
1) Trim the wick (your candle’s haircut)
Trim before lighting. For tapers, many safety and industry resources recommend a slightly longer trim than container candlesoften around
1/2 inch. The goal is a steady flame that doesn’t smoke, flicker wildly, or create soot.
2) Avoid drafts
Drafts cause uneven burning, dripping, and smoke. Keep tapers away from open windows, vents, fans, and that one hallway that turns into a wind tunnel
every time someone walks by dramatically.
3) Don’t treat a candle like a fireplace
If you’re burning for hours, check in occasionally. Never leave a candle unattended, and don’t burn it in a spot where you might fall asleep.
If you want “all-night ambience,” go with flameless candles. Your home insurance doesn’t do vibes.
Troubleshooting: “Why Is My Candle Dripping/Smoking/Being Weird?”
Problem: dripping wax
- Likely cause: drafty location or candle not standing straight
- Fix: move to a calmer spot; make sure the candle is upright and securely seated in the holder
Problem: smoke or soot
- Likely cause: wick too long or flame disturbed by airflow
- Fix: extinguish, let cool, trim wick, relight in a draft-free area
Problem: flame is too tall
- Likely cause: wick is too long
- Fix: trim wick and restart; a calmer, smaller flame is usually the goal
Where These Candles Shine: Styling Ideas You Can Steal
1) The “long dinner table” classic
Put a pair at the center of the table in simple holders, add low greenery or a few pieces of fruit, and you’re done. The height creates instant
occasion, even if the meal is delivery.
2) Mantel or console “vertical moment”
Tall tapers look amazing on a mantel or entry console where they can play against art, mirrors, or stacked books. Keep surrounding decor lower so the
candles feel like intentional anchors, not random sticks of ambition.
3) Wedding or event glow (without the chandelier budget)
Square tapers bring structure to tablescapesespecially in clusters of two or four, spaced apart. Choose one color for a clean look, or mix tones for
a more collected feel.
Are They Worth It? (A Quick Reality Check)
These are not the cheapest tapers you’ll ever buy. You’re paying for beeswax, hand-finishing, and a design-forward shape that looks like it belongs in
a styled shoot. If you burn tapers nightly, you may reserve these for special dinners, holidays, or whenever you want to feel like a person who folds
napkins.
If you love the look but fear commitment, start with one pair in a neutral color. If you immediately start planning your next dinner party like you’re
running a tiny restaurant, congratulations: you’re the target audience.
FAQ
Do they fit standard candle holders?
Generally yesthese are designed around standard taper holder sizing. Always double-check your holder’s cup size and make sure the candle sits
securely and upright.
Are they scented?
Beeswax typically has a subtle natural aroma, but these are not usually “perfume” candles. If you want strong fragrance, this is not that.
If you want warm light and quiet vibes, welcome home.
How long do they burn?
Many listings cite roughly 14–16 hours per candle, but your real-world results depend on drafts, wick trimming, and how steady the burn environment is.
Do they drip?
Any taper can drip if the flame is disturbed. A calm, draft-free spot and a properly trimmed wick reduce dripping dramatically.
Is it safe to leave them burning while I step out?
No. Candles should never be left unattended. If you’re leaving the room, extinguish them first.
Real-World Experiences With 16-Inch Square Tapers ()
The most memorable thing about living with tall square tapers is how quickly they change the “temperature” of a roomemotionally, not on your
thermostat (sadly, candles have not replaced HVAC). You light them and suddenly the space feels edited. The corners of the candle catch the flame and
throw off these crisp little shadows, which is a fancy way of saying: you will stare at them instead of your phone for a solid minute.
People often notice the first ten minutes are the “settling in” phase. If the candle is straight, the holder is stable, and there’s no draft, the
flame calms down into a steady, confident burn. That’s when the whole point of these candles shows up: not just light, but presence. On a dining table,
they act like gentle centerpieces that don’t demand a floral arrangement (or a florist invoice). On a mantel, they make the whole wall look taller,
which is the cheapest optical illusion you’ll ever buy for your home.
Another common experience: the vibe upgrade is disproportionate to the effort. You can do a lot of decorating thingsswap pillows, rearrange frames,
pretend you enjoy “gallery walls.” Or you can place two tall square tapers in simple holders and instantly look like someone who owns linen napkins and
knows what “warm neutrals” means. Even better, square tapers feel intentional in a way round tapers sometimes don’t. The shape reads architectural,
like you chose them on purpose instead of grabbing whatever was near the register.
If you host people, these candles tend to become a conversation magnetespecially as they burn down and start forming those little turret-like edges.
Someone will eventually say, “Wait, why does it look like a tiny castle?” and then you get to be the person who says, “Oh, they do that,” like you’re
casually fluent in candle behavior. (You don’t have to confess that you also Googled it.)
On the practical side, users often learn two lessons quickly. First: drafts are the enemy. A ceiling fan, an open window, or a vent can turn a clean
burn into a drippy, uneven messso placement matters. Second: wick care makes a noticeable difference. A quick trim before lighting often results in a
calmer flame, less smoke, and a prettier silhouette as the candle burns. It’s a tiny ritual that makes the whole experience feel more “intentional
adult,” even if your day was chaos.
Finally, there’s the “after” experience: these candles don’t just disappear when you blow them out. The holders look better because you used them.
Your table looks styled because there’s evidence you created atmosphere on purpose. And if you keep a spare pair boxed, you’ll always have a last-minute
gift that feels thoughtfullike you planned aheadwhen, in reality, you just have good candle instincts.
