Mineral Pigments ●
TL;DR. This ingredient is used as an insoluble colorant, adding shade, opacity, coverage, or tone correction in makeup, skincare, hair color, and personal care products.
What does Mineral Pigments do in a cosmetic formula?
This ingredient is used as an insoluble colorant, adding shade, opacity, coverage, or tone correction in makeup, skincare, hair color, and personal care products.
Is Mineral Pigments clean?
This ingredient is generally accepted in clean-beauty frameworks when cosmetic-grade and tested for trace heavy metals. The main scrutiny is not routine irritation, but contaminant control, particle-size transparency, and whether any surface treatments meet the standard being used.
Is Mineral Pigments sustainable?
This material is typically mined or it-derived, so its footprint is tied to extraction, refining, and supply-chain traceability. It is not biodegradable in the usual organic sense, but it is generally inert and does not break down into persistent organic residues.
Is Mineral Pigments COSMOS-approved?
It can be permitted under COSMOS-natural and COSMOS-organic products when the specific colorant is allowed, cosmetic-grade, and compliant with purity limits, but the final answer depends on the exact shade chemistry and any coating. From a Green Chemistry view, it scores well for stability and low reactivity, but less well for nonrenewable sourcing and mining impacts.
How does Mineral Pigments work chemically?
This ingredient consists of insoluble inorganic particles that color by selective light absorption and scattering rather than by dissolving into the formula. Use levels vary widely, from trace tinting below 1% to much higher levels in color cosmetics, and it is generally pH-stable but needs good dispersion to prevent streaking, settling, or shade drift.
Last updated 2026-05-13