Using pine sap for indoor lighting
Indoors, pine
sap was seldom made into candles. It was
unnecessary. A piece of sap cut or
pulled from a tree—about the size of a little finger from the tip of it to the
knuckle—would burn for longer than an hour.
It was laid on something flat that was heatproof, like a carefully
chosen rock with a depression in the top of it.
A lamp in a seashell would not drip tar on a table or cause the shell to
break from the heat. A wick of twisted
thread or string was pressed into the sap and lit. The flame would char the wick until it reached
the sap and then set it on fire.
Text and image from an article about colonial indoor lighting at Colonial American Digressions.
Rosin is a good fuel, but it is rare and cannot meet people's needs.
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