The Beekeeper Candle | Field Kit Soy Wax Candle with Honey & Clover Scent
Imagine a sunlit meadow buzzing with life, captured in a jar you can actually light.
What It Is
The Beekeeper Candle from Field Kit is an 8 oz hand-poured soy wax candle, blending sweet orange, apple, clover, and wild honey with a whisper of white musk for a scent that’s simultaneously pastoral and profoundly cinematic.
Why You’ll Actually Use It
Because lighting this candle doesn’t just fill a room with fragrance — it temporarily rewires your perception of “home.” It’s perfect for your reading nook, a quiet dinner, or those evenings when you just need a reminder that grass, bees, and honey exist outside Instagram filters.
Key Details:
8 oz / 227 g hand-poured soy wax candle
Clean-burning cotton wick
Top notes: sweet orange, apple
Mid notes: clover, wild honey
Base notes: white musk
50+ hour burn time
Reusable glass jar
The Beekeeper Candle is more than ambiance — it’s an invitation to inhabit a world you almost forgot existed, one golden, honeyed moment at a time.
About the brand: Field Kit
Field Kit is the brand that quietly insists your environment deserves the same intentionality you bring to your thoughts at 2 a.m., when you’re simultaneously convinced and unsure that the meaning of life is buried somewhere in your Spotify history. They translate moments — a rain‑soaked meadow, the exact optimism of lilac in bloom, the green edge of freshly cut grass — into objects that feel both familiar and slightly uncanny, like memory made physical. Their candles, scents, and crafted goods don’t shout “olfactory experience”; they suggest it, like a friend leaning in mid‑conversation with a look that says, “Do you smell that? Because that’s exactly it.” And it’s not just style over substance: Field Kit sources responsibly, uses sustainable materials, and prioritizes clean, non-toxic ingredients, proving that sensory indulgence and ethical responsibility aren’t mutually exclusive. In a world where fragrance is often treated as wallpaper, Field Kit treats it as a way of understanding time, place, and the sensorial residue of lived moments — a portable phenomenology for the home, built with care for both people and planet.
