Every year I encourage my peeps to attend the Archipelago Botanicals warehouse sale south of Downtown Los Angeles — the deals are AMAZING.
The products they sell are typically discontinued OR overstock OR retailer returns OR discolored OR damaged OR test pours. Those boxes take up valuable space that they’d like prefer filled with full-price salable product. Selling these products at rock bottom prices mean they get a return on product that might otherwise be thrown out. Everybody wins!
For $35, I picked up 25 candles and 2 huge bottles of shower gel today.

The breakdown:
- 2 32-oz bottles of pomegranate shower gel (retail $28 each)
- 1 Fiji Glass Jar Candle, 120 hours burn time, sans lid (retail $30)
- 1 Fiji 6.5″ pillar candle (retail $21)
- 1 Corsica 6.5″ pillar candles (retail $21)
- 1 Corsica 3.25″ pillar candle (retail $16.25)
- 2 Paper White soy candles sans labels (retail $29.50 each)
- 1 Espresso soy candle sans label (retail 29.50)
- 1 Sugar Cane & Coconut store demo candles (about 2/3 the size of the one sold at retail for $18)
- 1 White Sugar & Mango store demo candles (about 2/3 the size of the one sold at retail for $18)
- 2 Wasabi-Mint Soy Candles, no box (retail $24 each)
- 1 Papaya Vanilla Soy Candle, no box (retail $24)
- 1 Jasmine Hibiscus Soy Candle, no box or label, (retail $24)
- 4 Malaga candles (retail $15 each)
- 2 Pomegranate soy candles, sans box (retail $25 each)
- 1 Milk Candle in Tin (retail $11)
- 4 Tommy Bahama Plantation Sugar 3″ pillar candles (retail $12.50 each)
$523.75 worth of (mostly) candles for $35 today.
A friend picked up 4 candles from the Royals Collection for $20 total. Turns out they’re $45 each in the retail world.
It was a zoo and the lines were long, but given the haul by each member of my shopping party, it was worth 3 hours on a Saturday. I’m going to be knee deep in candles until next fall, right before Warehouse clearance 2009.
The sad news: Sunday (tomorrow) is the final day of the sale.
The good news: they’re considering a mid-year candle clearance in 2009 as well.
Update, even better news: the sale is back by popular demand on Sat 12/20 from 8:30am-4pm
Tips for the best quality candles at the sale:
- Bring a baggy of coffee beans. After an hour in that ware house you can’t smell much of anything. Take a hit of coffee beans between candles. The coffee bean smell is strong enough to clear your nose and kept it functioning in peak condition.
- Don’t use the reusable shopping bags they supply; instead place your candles in the empty boxes you can grab from diff’t corners of the warehouse. Pillar candles rub up against glass jars and get scraped up. Stacked in a box, you’ve got a better chance to keep the candles in the most pristine condition.
- Some parts of the candle sale feature a random selection. Single candles of different fragrances. Unlabeled candles. There are number of tables full of them. There’s never room to display everything, so you’ll find stacks of boxes under the tables. Don’t just eyeball what’s on top; dig through these boxes underneath. Today, I found some of my best buys hidden away out of sight.
- Is a great gift candle all scuffed up? Buy it anyway. Use a hair dryer to melt the top layer of wax. After the wax starts to melt and pool (about a minute), set it aside to it to dry evenly.
Tips for the best savings at the sale:
- Pack the loose candles into one of the many boxes you see hanging about. Layer up! Large quantities are overwhelming to the people tallying your purchases, and they tend to err in your favor when ballparkinghow many candles are in the box.
- Buy white and yellow candles. Yellowed candles are the most discounted — typically 2 for $1. They’re not going to unpack your box(es) of candles to verify that the white candles are totally white, so your pricing is sometimes better than with the colored candles.
- Don’t come first thing in the morning. Come towards the last 2 hours. Even if the sale ends at 3pm, the staff is there until the last person has forked over the green and left. They want to go home and won’t over think the prices, so they can keep the line moving.
- Boxed candles cost more than the same candle sans box, so a lot of people remove the box and leave it behind. If the candle is for personal use and not a gift, it’s the difference between paying $3 and $5.

















Recent Comments