3 min read

The birthday effect

Close up of birthday candles on a small cake in a dark room.

The weekly micro-decorating newsletter * Issue 12 of 13, A24 *
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It's my birthday tomorrow, and even though I'm well past the stage of being precise with the candle count – it might cause a bonfire now – I still love the ritual of the cake and the wish. That moment with the room aglow and family singing takes me back to childhood and the assurance of being loved.

Lately I've been wondering why we don't strive for that sensation more often. A group of lit candles in a shadowy room with a gathering of friends might prompt the same memory, no matter what day of the year it is. During this darkest month, shops are full of ways to fill your space with candlelight.

Sculptural candles are having a moment, and this set I picked up at Stylegarage are currently gracing my dining room. But I'm reluctant to light them, since it means messing with their neat geometry:

Two sculptural candles, each made of a bending candle that creates the base as well.

It might be more sensible to keep candles and support as separate entities, leaving the latter to be consistently itself. One of my favourite vintage pieces, acquired at Zig Zag long ago, is this teak, steel and brass number, handsome even when it doesn't hold anything:

Mid-century candle holder with seven arms holding slender white tapers.

It's one part candelabra, one part spiral staircase, making the horizontal terrain of birthday cakes seem pedestrian:

The same candle holder with all the candles lit.

This past weekend, I was browsing at CB2 and came across this nine-armed model that has a similar staggered effect. It looks like a great centrepiece for a holiday dinner:

Nine-armed white candelabra holding white unlit candles.

It's available in a black five-armed version as well:

Smaller version of the same candelabra in black, holding five white candles that are lit.

The stylists who craft CB2's aspirational photos sure know how to raise it to an almost otherworldly level:

The same black candelabra as above, with five lit white candles, on a marble tabletop with artfully arranged objects.

The thing is, even at its most basic, a lit candle has an effect. On my birthday last year, my Mom realized she didn't have any cake, so she planted a candle in a small cookie. A song, a wish, a quick exhalation. Somehow the moment was just as special.

A yellow lit birthday candle planted in a small cookie that rests on a stylish saucer.

So if you're feeling ambitious, go hunting for your dream candleholder. Or if you're in need of an instant boost, find a candle in a kitchen drawer, look for something sturdy to hold it – an empty wine bottle will do – and create your own occasion. It's time to dispel the darkness. It's possible.

Thank you for reading.