Mineral make-up ingredients: Micronaspheres or Ronaflair M-Sphere

I’m not sure exactly why I’m posting pictures of various fillers in these posts. They’re white powders – for the most part – and you can’t tell much about them from the pictures. But I guess I just don’t want the posts to seem boring… Micronaspheres – or Ronaflair M-Sphere as it seems to be...

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Mineral-make up ingredients: Sericite mica (updated)

What exactly is sericite mica and why is it used so much in mineral make-up? Sericite mica is a natural powdered mica (aluminum potassium silicate) similar to white mica with a fine grain size and silky shine. It is used as a talc substitute. Mineral make-up used to be made with a talc as the...

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Mineral make-up: Particle size and nanoparticles

A side note about particle size…Particles in mineral make up are measured in microns or “nanomicrons”. The lower the particle size, the more longer wavelength light is transmitted. What does this mean to us? With a lower particle size you’ll get less reflected visible light and less whitening from products like zinc oxide or titanium...

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MIneral make-up ingredients: Titanium dioxide

Titanium dioxide (Ti02) is a staple in mineral make-up, offering light scattering and whitening properties. In fact, titanium dioxide is one of the whitest materials on earth, so you can add it to your creations to create heavier coverage or whiter colours. Because of this whitening effect, it would not be considered a translucent or...

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Mineral make-up ingredients: Zinc oxide

Zinc oxide (ZnO) is a staple in mineral make-up products. So why do we use it?Zinc oxide tends to whiten skin, so we use it in MMU as a skin whitener that is going to be less opaque than titanium dioxide (more about this product tomorrow). It offers good coverage – the more you use,...

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