Mr_Dark_Devil
One of the best scientists in the world was obviously the one and only... Einstein. One of Einstein's saying, well, a speech, which was not that popular was this!
Child - "Sir, where has that light come from on the candle?"
Einstein - "I'll tell you" He blows the candle out! "If you tell me where that light just went!"
This small conversation, to this day, has puzzled me, Einstein has a very good point, and so does the child for that matter! Where has it actually come from? And where has it gone? neutral
I have no idea if this is real... but I can imagine Einstein would be kind to a kid instead of getting technical.
The light is coming from electrons changing orbitals and releasing photons, when an electron drops an energy level it releases light, that light then travels to your eye, so the best answer is "all of the excited particles from the hot fire are generating light".
When you blow the candle out the light continues traveling at c, what doesn't get absorbed by your eye and turned into information is probably quickly absorbed by other things in the room, all done so quickly that it just seems like the light "vanishes". But because the candle has just been blown out, the fire stops providing heat to particles, and electrons no longer get really really excited and drop down energy levels releasing photons, instead the only blackbody light emitted by the system is too low frequency to be seen by the naked eye.