
Your jack-o'-lantern may be rotting on your back porch like mine (oops!), but that's no reason to shun pumpkins altogether. You can make seasonal candle holders that would be perfect for a
Thanksgiving table from some inexpensive, mini pumpkins from your grocery store or local farmers market. I noticed this little trick within a DIY for making a
mini pumpkin centerpiece on Martha Stewart, but I'm not so keen on the entire centerpiece idea.

I've been totally in love with
Glassybaby candle holders for months now, but I can't bring myself to spend $40 on a small votive. So when I came across CandleTech's DIY for making water balloon luminaries with very much the same shape simply out of paraffin wax, I knew I'd found an affordable alternative. All you'll need for this project is high-melt paraffin wax, water balloons, a piece of paper, a double boiler, a cookie sheet, and perhaps a candy thermometer.

I can't think of a more delightful way to spend my
endless Summer evenings than under the warm glow of candlelight. There are plenty of
trendy ornate chandeliers out there, but I love the sophisticated simplicity of
Gump's Iron Candle Chandelier ($99, reduced from $250). Who needs crystals and
birds birds birds when you've got timeless, hand-forged iron and classic tapers to light up the night?

Using reclaimed light bulbs to build the
Oyule Lamp Set ($650), Sergio Silva transformed "a modern object into the very thing it was meant to replace." Beyond its symbolic shrewdness, it's just plain beautiful. Thanks to the strong spherical magnet Silva put inside the bulb, which attracts to a steel component in Oyule's acrylic base, the bulbs balance uncannily at an angle.

One of the most effortless ways to bring
Summer style to your home is to set basic votives at your
outdoor dining table or around any outdoor space. But melted wax gets messy, and trying to scrape your candle from your votive holder is never a fun task. So I was delighted to learn a helpful trick
from Martha Stewart for cleaning votive holders.