Hematite Clay

TL;DR. It is used mainly as a mineral colorant, adding an earthy red-brown tone, with secondary absorbency and opacity in masks, powders, and complexion products.

What does Hematite Clay do in a cosmetic formula?

It is used mainly as a mineral colorant, adding an earthy red-brown tone, with secondary absorbency and opacity in masks, powders, and complexion products.

Is Hematite Clay clean?

Clean-beauty frameworks generally treat it as acceptable when cosmetic-grade, since it is inert on skin and has low sensitization potential. The main checks are heavy-metal specifications and control of respirable fine particles in loose powders.

Is Hematite Clay sustainable?

This material is mined, so its footprint depends on land disturbance, dust control, and trace-metal management at the source. It is inorganic and not biodegradable, but it is not expected to bioaccumulate or break down into microplastic-like residues.

Is Hematite Clay COSMOS-approved?

It is generally permitted under COSMOS-natural and COSMOS-organic when obtained from natural mineral sources and processed only by allowed physical methods. It fits Green Chemistry through low reactivity and simple processing, but it is non-renewable and outside biodegradability frameworks because it is inorganic.

How does Hematite Clay work chemically?

This ingredient is an inorganic mineral blend, with iron in the +3 oxidation state bound in an oxide lattice alongside aluminosilicate particles. It is insoluble, stable across normal cosmetic pH ranges, and typically used at low color-adjusting levels in leave-on products or higher levels in masks and powders.

Last updated 2026-05-15