REVIEW · PARIS
Paris: Cocktail Candle Making
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by KIMIKO CRAFT PARIS · Bookable on GetYourGuide
A cocktail you can burn sounds fun. In Paris, this workshop with Kimiko Craft Paris turns that idea into colorful drink-shaped candles for your home decor.
I especially like that it’s easy to make, even if you’ve never done crafts. I also appreciate the friendly, helpful guidance from Kim, plus plenty of decorations and color choices so your candle doesn’t look like everyone else’s.
One possible drawback: the session is only about 1.5 hours, so if you want a long, detailed art project, you may feel a bit rushed at the end.
In This Review
- Key Things I’d Bet You’ll Care About
- Paris Candle-Making That Feels Like a Craft and a Treat
- Where You Meet and How the Workshop Starts at Number 39
- Your 90 Minutes With Kim: Making a Candle That Looks Like a Drink
- Choosing Colors and Decorations: The Part That Makes It Feel Personal
- Snacks, Tea/Coffee, and Photos: Small Extras With Real Value
- Price and Value: Is $74 Reasonable for a Paris Workshop?
- Who This Workshop Suits Best (and Who Might Skip It)
- Taking Your Candle Home (And Actually Using It)
- Should You Book This Cocktail Candle Workshop in Paris?
- FAQ
- How long is the Paris Cocktail Candle Making workshop?
- How many people are in the group?
- Where do we meet for the workshop?
- What’s included in the price?
- What languages does the instructor speak?
- Can I choose the colors and decorations?
- Is there free cancellation?
Key Things I’d Bet You’ll Care About

- Cocktail-inspired candle shapes you can actually use as décor
- Kim’s hands-on, friendly instruction with lots of choices to personalize
- All materials included, so you can focus on making, not shopping
- Tea/coffee and snacks during the workshop to keep it relaxed
- Photos during the session, plus you take your finished candle home
Paris Candle-Making That Feels Like a Craft and a Treat

Paris can be intense. Museums are loud with masterpieces and lines. This is different. You get a small, creative room moment where the goal isn’t to be impressed by something big. It’s to make something yours.
The core idea here is straightforward: you decorate a candle to look like a cute drink. The result is a playful object for your living room, entryway, or kitchen shelf. It’s also a great souvenir because it’s not just a photo prop. You can actually light it later—assuming you follow the candle’s normal use.
What makes it appealing is the balance: it’s creative and personal, but not complicated. Kim guides you through the process, and the format is built for a small group (from 2 to 8 people). That means less waiting, more time with your own materials and choices.
And yes, the “drink candle” concept is silly in the best way. It’s the kind of craft that makes you smile while you’re working. Then you bring it home and it keeps the fun going. If you like small experiences that feel local and handmade, this fits.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Paris.
Where You Meet and How the Workshop Starts at Number 39

You don’t need to hunt through the city with map stress. The experience includes pickup. You’ll be picked up in front of number 39, and you should arrive about 5 minutes early.
Plan for a quick pre-workshop buffer in your day. A pickup at a specific address works best when you’re already nearby and not running across Paris like you’re late for the Metro. You’ll also return to the same meeting point at the end, so there’s no awkward guessing about where the activity ends.
The workshop itself is designed as a private activity for friends or family. That matters, because it changes the energy. You’re not squeezed into a large group where everyone competes for attention. Instead, you get a calmer rhythm—ask questions, pick colors, and learn without feeling on stage.
Also, this is offered in English and French with an instructor. If you’re traveling in a language bubble, that helps. If you’re mixing languages, it still works. You can focus on making rather than translating every step.
Bottom line: the start is tidy and organized, and that saves your travel time for the parts you really want to enjoy.
Your 90 Minutes With Kim: Making a Candle That Looks Like a Drink

The workshop lasts about 1 hour 30 minutes. In that time, you’ll make a candle and shape it into a cute “drink” look. The process is described as straightforward, and it’s set up so the experience is suitable for everyone.
Here’s what you can expect in practical terms:
- You’ll get all materials at the workshop.
- Kim will show you what to do, step by step.
- You’ll decorate and shape your candle so it matches your style.
- You’ll finish with something you can take home.
Because the materials are provided, you won’t spend your pre-class time wondering what tools you need. That also means the pace is consistent. You’re working with the supplies they designed for this specific technique, not improvised craft items.
The “drink candle” format also means your decisions are visual. You’re choosing colors and decorations to get that playful effect. You’re not just filling a mold. You’re building a little personality into the final piece.
One thing I’d keep in mind: 90 minutes is enough to complete a fun project, but it’s not enough to fix mistakes endlessly. If you get stuck, focus on small adjustments and keep moving. The goal is a finished candle, not perfection.
If you’re the type who likes doing things with your hands—pouring, shaping, decorating—this is your speed. If you’re hoping for a long, meditative craft, it’s more “creative sprint” than “all-day workshop.”
Choosing Colors and Decorations: The Part That Makes It Feel Personal
This workshop isn’t just about following instructions. The fun is personalization.
You get lots of decoration and color options, and Kim helps you pick combinations that make the candle look like a cute beverage. That matters for two reasons.
First, it changes how the candle looks on your shelf. A simple candle can be nice. A drink-shaped candle becomes a conversation piece. It adds whimsy without being childish. It looks like décor, not like a craft you made once and forgot in a drawer.
Second, it makes the time pass faster. When you’re actively choosing colors, you’re not waiting for the instructor to catch up. You’re making decisions in real time.
From the feedback, Kim’s approach is friendly and helpful. That style is important in craft workshops. If you’re uncertain, you want someone to point you back to a good choice, not just watch you struggle.
If you’re traveling with someone, this is also a great shared activity. People naturally bond while they’re making choices together—asking what color works, comparing ideas, and laughing when something turns out cuter than planned.
So when you plan your day, think of it as a mini art project with clear boundaries. It gives you freedom where it counts and structure where it saves time.
Snacks, Tea/Coffee, and Photos: Small Extras With Real Value
A lot of craft tours skip the comfort and focus only on the making. This one includes snacks and tea/coffee, which turns the workshop into a relaxed hangout as much as a class.
That may sound like a minor detail, but it’s not. When you’re in Paris, you’re usually juggling walking, museums, lines, and hunger. Having food and something warm to drink during a short 1.5-hour activity helps you stay in a good mood.
Then there are the photos. You get many beautiful photos during the workshop. This is more useful than you might think. You’re spending time making a shape that’s photogenic by design—like a cute drink—and you’ll probably want proof that you actually did it (and didn’t just watch).
It also helps with gift making. If you’re making this candle as a present, photos make the process more meaningful, even if the recipient only sees the final piece later.
These extras are part of the value. For $74, you’re not only paying for wax and instructions. You’re paying for a ready-made experience where the comfort and documentation are included.
Price and Value: Is $74 Reasonable for a Paris Workshop?
$74 per person is the headline price. That can feel steep if you’re comparing it to DIY craft nights elsewhere. In Paris, though, the question is whether you’re getting more than “materials and go.”
Here’s what you get that justifies the price for many people:
- All materials provided (so you don’t add hidden costs)
- Snacks and tea/coffee included
- Instructor support in English or French
- Small group size (limited to 8)
- Photos during the session
- You bring your finished candle home
For me, the value comes from the total package. You’re buying an experience that’s hosted and planned, not a bag of supplies you assemble on your own.
Also, the time matters. At 1.5 hours, you’re not losing half a day. You can fit this between sightseeing blocks and still feel productive.
If you’re already excited about home décor or you like making souvenirs that aren’t just magnets, this price feels more fair. If you’re expecting a heavy, multi-hour art class with deep instruction, you might compare it differently.
But as a short, guided, hands-on workshop in Paris with extras included, $74 is pretty reasonable.
Who This Workshop Suits Best (and Who Might Skip It)
This experience is a strong match for:
- People who like hands-on crafts more than lectures
- Couples or friend groups who want something playful and shareable
- Anyone looking for a useful souvenir (a candle you can light later)
- Travelers who want a small-group activity with English/French support
It may be less ideal for:
- Someone who wants a long-form workshop with deep technical training
- People who prefer to keep their day packed with major sights only
- Anyone who doesn’t like decorating or choosing colors (because that’s a big part of the fun)
If you’re the type who likes to bring home a story, this works. You’ll have a tangible item—and a memory tied to making it.
And for families: the workshop is described as suitable for everyone, so it’s not built like a hardcore class. Still, because it’s 1.5 hours, younger kids might need a calm, patient pace. The small group helps.
Taking Your Candle Home (And Actually Using It)
At the end of the workshop, you can bring your products home. That’s a big deal, because you’re not leaving with an artwork that you have to ship or pick up later. You walk out with the finished candle.
You’ll also have photos from the session, which is handy when you want to remember the colors you chose—or when you want to share what you made without hunting down your own blurry attempts.
If you’re thinking about placement at home, a drink-shaped candle usually looks best where people will see it without squinting—like a shelf, side table, or entryway console. It’s decorative first, but it’s also functional if you light it after letting it cool and using it properly like any candle.
One more practical thought: bring it carefully in your bag or by your side on the walk home. The whole point is that you made something pretty. Treat it like it matters.
Should You Book This Cocktail Candle Workshop in Paris?
I’d book it if you want a hands-on Paris activity that’s playful, organized, and not intimidating. The combination of easy candle-making, a friendly instructor (Kim), included snacks/tea, and photos makes it feel like a complete experience, not just a short class.
I’d skip it if you’re mainly chasing big-ticket sightseeing or you want something that takes longer and goes deeper. This is the kind of activity that fits between plans. It’s not trying to replace an afternoon at the Louvre.
If your travel style leans toward small memorable moments—especially those that turn into décor—this is a solid pick.
FAQ
How long is the Paris Cocktail Candle Making workshop?
The workshop lasts about 1.5 hours (1 hour 30 minutes).
How many people are in the group?
It’s a small group limited to 8 participants, with groups starting from 2 people.
Where do we meet for the workshop?
You’ll be picked up in front of number 39. Plan to show up about 5 minutes before it starts.
What’s included in the price?
All materials are provided, snacks and tea/coffee are included, you’ll get many photos, and you can bring your finished candle home.
What languages does the instructor speak?
The instructor speaks English and French.
Can I choose the colors and decorations?
You’ll be able to choose among decorations and colors during the workshop.
Is there free cancellation?
Free cancellation is available up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.






















