
Making Rushlights — The Cheapest Light in History
Before candles were affordable, most households across Europe and Asia lit their evenings with rushlights — the peeled pith of a rush stem dipped in tallow or grease. A rushlight is not a candle: it has no wick inside a body of wax. Instead, the porous rush pith itself is the fuel, with the absorbed fat making it burn slowly rather than flashing to ash.
Rushlights cost virtually nothing. Rushes grow wild in every damp meadow and ditch. The grease came from kitchen drippings — bacon fat, mutton drippings, any leftover cooking grease. A family could gather a year's supply of rushes in an afternoon and dip them in an evening. In England, rushlights remained the primary domestic lighting for rural labourers well into the 1800s, long after candles and oil lamps were common in towns.
A single rushlight 30 cm long burns for about 15-20 minutes with a soft, flickering flame roughly equal to a modern tea light. Held in a simple iron clip (a rushlight holder), it provides enough light to eat supper, mend clothes, or spin wool by.
التعليمات
Harvest the rushes
Harvest the rushes
Peel the rush stems
Peel the rush stems
Dry the peeled rushes
Dry the peeled rushes
Melt the grease
Melt the grease
المواد لهذه الخطوة:
Animal Fat (Tallow)500 غDip the rushes
Dip the rushes
Cool and store
Cool and store
Burn in a rushlight holder
Burn in a rushlight holder
المواد
1- 500 غعنصر نائب
مواد المخططات المرتبطة
You might also need
Materials makers commonly use alongside this build.
المخططات ذات الصلة
هذه المخططات تشارك المعرفة مع هذا — التقنيات والمواد والمبادئ
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Other builds that share materials, tools, or techniques with this one.






CC0 ملكية عامة
هذا المخطط مُصدر بموجب CC0. يحق لك نسخه وتعديله وتوزيعه واستخدامه لأي غرض، دون طلب إذن.
ادعم الصانع بشراء منتجات عبر مخططه حيث يكسب عمولة الصانع يحددها البائعون، أو أنشئ نسخة جديدة من هذا المخطط وضمّنه كرابط في مخططك لمشاركة الإيرادات.







