25 Feb 2012

Wax the cork grip
Beeswax

USE THIS BLOG AT YOUR OWN RISK!

I'd been looking for something good to take care of cork grip.
One day, Mr. Matt West gave me an idea,
He said
"Some people wax the cork grip."

It's a Beeswax.

I tried to buy a beeswax in Darwin.
But I couldn't find it at any shops in Darwin.

I was at a loss.

A miracle happened to me.
My very good friend, Simon had it.
He uses a beeswax for polishing his important furniture.
Simon said that it's very common in Britain.






Simon gave me "Beeswax".
Thanks Simon. ☆⌒(*^-゚)v Thanks!!






My cork grip isn't slippery.
Cork smells like a pine now.



Uses as a product -Wikipedia-

Beeswax candles and figuresBeeswax is mainly used to make honeycomb foundation for reuse by the bees.

Purified and bleached beeswax is used in the production of food, cosmetics, and pharmaceuticals:

As a coating for cheese, to protect the food as it ages. As a food additive, it is known as E901 (glazing agent).

As a skin care product, a German study found beeswax to be superior to similar "barrier creams" (usually mineral oil based creams, such as petroleum jelly), when used according to its protocol.[8]

Beeswax is an ingredient in moustache wax, as well as hair pomades.

Beeswax is an ingredient in surgical bone wax.

Candles
Beeswax was traditionally prescribed as the material (or at least a significant part of the material) for the Paschal candle ("Easter candle") and is recommended for other candles used in the liturgy of the Roman Catholic Church.[9]

Beeswax is used commercially to make fine candles.

Although only about 10,000 tons are produced annually, a variety of niche uses exist:[10]

As a component of shoe polish

As a component of furniture polish, dissolved in turpentine, sometimes blended with linseed or tung oil

As a component of modeling waxes.

As a blended with pine rosin, beeswax serves as an adhesive to attach reed plates to the structure inside a squeezebox.

Used to make Cutler's resin.

Used in Eastern Europe in egg decoration. It is used for writing, via resist dyeing, on batik eggs (as in pysanky) and for making beaded eggs.
Formerly used in the manufacturing of the cylinders used by the earliest phonographs.

Used by percussionists to make a surface on tambourines for thumb rolls.






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