Heart's Desire Mica Glitter in Eco-Friendly Pink Gold

Heart's Desire Pink Mica Glitter

5 gram bag
Sale price  $1.17 Regular price  $1.30
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Heart's Desire Mica Glitter in Eco-Friendly Pink Gold

Heart's Desire Pink Mica Glitter

82 reviews

Sale price  $1.17 Regular price  $1.30
Size

Description

Bring your fantasies to life with Heart's Desire Eco-Friendly Mica Glitter. This enchanting pink glitter, adorned with golden flecks, weaves a touch of magic into your projects, creating a shimmering effect straight out of a fairytale.

Crafted from fluorphlogopite, it offers an eco-friendly way to achieve luxurious sparkle. It shines in melt-and-pour soaps, while cold process creations radiate with captivating brilliance. Add it to bath bombs for a mesmerizing swirl of color and shine in the bath water, turning ordinary moments into pure enchantment.

Color Testing Notes

Heart’s Desire is a mica-based glitter made with synthetic mica, offering peace of mind with no mining concerns. It’s a beautiful soft pink with a hint of orange that gives it a warm glow. In cold process soap, it loses its sparkle and becomes a lovely soft pink, but it truly shines in products like lip balms, resin, and bath bombs where its shimmer can stand out.

Notes By Owner/Maker/Creator - Yours Truly, Carrie Jack 😊❤️

Ingredients & Info

INCI: Fluorphlogopite, titanium dioxide, iron oxide, tin oxide
Micron Size: 30-150 μm

FDA Approved Use

  • Eyes: Yes
  • Lips: Yes
  • Bath Bombs: Yes
  • General Body Use: Yes

Use Notes

Mica-based glitters are the only glitter we have found that can add sparkle to cold process soaps! They need to be used at about 3 teaspoons per pound of oils to achieve a sparkle effect.

They can also be used with bath bombs to add fine glittery effect to the water.

Use Rate

  • CP Soap: 3 teaspoons per pound of oils.
  • MP Soap: .5 teaspoon per pound of soap base.

More or less can be added to achieve your desired color.

CA Prop 65

⚠️ Warning: Titanium dioxide (airborne, unbound particles of respirable size) is on the Proposition 65 list because it can cause cancer. Exposure to titanium dioxide may increase the risk of cancer. Once incorporated into a liquid or solid base it is no longer airborne and falls off the Prop 65 list.

Documentation

  • 📁 SDS
  • 📁 CoA