Nothing says ‘romantic’ like candles

A newcomer in the world of personalized search, Ness Computing recently released a free iOS app that provides restaurant recommendations based on a user's personal tastes.

A newcomer in the world of personalized search, Ness Computing recently released a free iOS app that provides restaurant recommendations based on a user's personal tastes.

Published Jun 10, 2011

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Nothing says “I love you” like flowers. But nothing says “romantic” like candles. In the finest restaurants and hotels, at the smartest weddings - wherever, in fact, you wish to create an atmosphere conducive to gazing into the eyes of someone special - stick a few tea-lights in holders and voilà, the flicker of the flame a shorthand for instant intimacy.

Which is weird, because the other take on wax-based lighting is, well, lighting after the sun has gone down.

Over the centuries, the candle found its way into the holy realm from festivals of light to flames of remembrance and, somewhere along the way, acquired an air of mysticism.

And that was before they made the things smell like those dried piles of pot pourri that were rapidly collecting dust on our coffee-tables. Now we are to believe that if we fill our houses with candles made with the careful addition of aromatherapy oils, our homes and our health will benefit. Cinnamon, apparently, eases the symptoms of colds and flu; lavender relieves stress; ylang ylang settles nervous problems; patchouli soothes the spirit. And so on.

Then there’s the view that the only candles worth buying are those that come in little glass tumblers and cost the best part of a day's salary for those on the minimum wage. You know the ones. They do look and smell delightful. They do last longer than the ones you buy for a considerably less in a Chinese supermarket. And they do tell the world that you are the kind of person with money to burn. - The Independent on Sunday

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