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Mica - Antique Blue

Mica - Antique Blue

Price: $7.20

Code: MATQBL

Ounces:
1 oz. = $7.20
2 oz. = $14.05
4 oz. = $27.40
8 oz. = $53.30

Promotion Code: 

NOTE: Our pigments and micas are sold by weight - not volume - so you're getting the most for your money!

Approved for use in cosmetics.

This mica shimmers and shines beautifully - it's a dual colored mica; one side of the platelet is blue and the other is gray creating a mica that is great when you want an alternative to food color blue. Good results with this mica not bleeding.

NOTE: This color goes gray in cold-process soap. 

FYI: Micas use light reflection, refraction, and transmission to exhibit their effects much like a prism creates various colors as light passes through it. Therefore, micas work best in clear soap!!

General Instruction for Nu-Scents micas:

Cold Process (CP) soapmaking: Micas work in CP soap, but only marginally, as there is no light for reflection (since CP soap is opaque). To use it in CP soap, use 2 tsp. per pound of soap to achieve a good color. Simply add the mica directly to the soap and stir. Make sure you add it at very thin trace so that you have enought time to stir the colorant in.

Melt n'Pour (MP) soapmaking:

  • (1) If you are using a clear, transparent or translucent base, we recommend about 1/2 tsp. per pound to achieve a nice, strong pearl effect.


  • (2) You can use micas in opaque base at 1.5%-4% of the total weight to achieve good color, but micas work best in clear soap. Light is needed for the true reflective qualitites of the micas to work properly.


  • Micas are relatively simple to use. Just add the powder to your melting soap base, wait for your base to melt and stir the micas in. If pesky little "mica bubbles" float to the top, just spritz them with a bit of rubbing alcohol and you'll see them burst open. Just stir everything in until the mica is well incorporated, then add your fragrance. Micas can be heavy and therefore may settle out in low viscosity. To use in soaps, pour your soaps at cooler temperatures as they will suspend the micas better. To achieve the real effect of a mica in soap, the particles need to be aligned in the same direction - you can try pouring your soap and then "combing" the surface of the soap in one direction using a spatula. You will get different results when you add micas to colored verses non-colored soaps. Having a background color enhances the effects of the mica.