Mica Powder Variety Pack #11 (Fluorescent) - Beaver Dust Pigments
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Beaver Dust Pigments Variety Pack #11 - Fluorescent Neon Colours is a curated mica powder sample pack featuring 8 vibrant fluorescent colours for epoxy resin, resin art, woodworking projects, candles, soap making, and craft applications. These colours are often referred to as neon mica powders because of their bright, high-energy look under normal lighting and their stronger fluorescent effect when used under a black light.
Each colour in this variety pack is weighed at 10 grams, giving you more pigment per colour than our standard 5 gram variety packs. This makes the pack a great choice for testing neon epoxy pours, black light projects, coasters, small molds, resin art, sample pours, craft projects, and bright colour combinations before committing to a larger project.
Colours Included in Variety Pack #11
- Fluorescent Green
- Fluorescent Green Yellow
- Fluorescent Pink
- Fluorescent Yellow Orange
- Fluorescent Purple
- Fluorescent Magenta
- Fluorescent Orange Red
- Fluorescent Blue
Best Uses for This Neon Fluorescent Mica Powder Pack
- Testing bright neon-style fluorescent mica powder colours
- Black light epoxy projects and UV-reactive-style visual effects
- Epoxy resin art, fluid pours, coasters, trays, and small molds
- Bright colour accents for woodworking projects, inlays, and void fills
- Festival, party, arcade, glow-style, and high-contrast resin projects
- Candle making, soap making, and craft projects
Why Choose a Fluorescent Neon Pigment Variety Pack?
A variety pack is one of the easiest ways to test colours before using them in a larger epoxy pour. Instead of choosing one full-size pigment jar based on a photo, you can make small sample pours, compare colours side by side, and see how each neon fluorescent pigment looks in your exact resin, lighting, mold, wood species, and project depth.
This Fluorescent pack is especially useful when you want bold colour that stands out. The colours are vibrant under normal lighting, but they are designed to have their strongest effect under a black light. That makes them a strong option for black light resin art, neon coasters, bright trays, party-themed projects, colourful inlays, decorative castings, jewelry, keychains, and small sample pours.
How Fluorescent Pigments Are Different
Fluorescent pigments are different from standard mica powder colours because they are designed to look especially bright and energetic. Many customers refer to these as neon pigments because of their bold colour intensity and black light effect.
For best results, test these pigments in small pours before using them in a finished project. The final look can change depending on lighting, resin depth, background colour, pigment amount, and whether the project will be viewed under normal lighting or black light.
Why Beaver Dust Pigments Are Different
Beaver Dust Pigments are made with fine particles under 60 microns. This smaller particle size helps the pigment mix smoothly into epoxy and stay suspended while the resin cures, instead of settling to the bottom like some larger or heavier pigment particles can.
Because fluorescent and neon-style colours can behave differently depending on lighting and background colour, this variety pack is a practical way to test real results before using a colour in a larger resin, craft, or woodworking project.
Suggested Projects
- Neon coaster sets: Use small silicone molds to test all 8 fluorescent colours and create bright coaster-style projects.
- Black light resin art: Use these pigments for resin pieces that are designed to stand out under black light.
- Bright epoxy inlays: Add fluorescent colour to cracks, voids, carved details, logos, and decorative woodworking accents.
- Festival and party projects: Use neon pink, blue, green, purple, orange, and magenta tones for bold, high-energy resin pieces.
- Sample pours: Test each colour under normal light and black light so you can compare how the effect changes.
- Custom pigment blends: Mix colours from the pack to create your own neon green, hot pink, bright orange, electric purple, fluorescent blue, and high-contrast colour combinations.
How Much Pigment Should You Use?
For the Fluorescent Neon line, a good starting point is approximately 1/2 teaspoon per 1 litre of epoxy for a stronger fluorescent effect. You can adjust from there depending on the colour intensity, opacity, shimmer, and final effect you want.
For sample pours, start with a small amount of pigment, mix thoroughly, and add more gradually. Fluorescent colours can look different under normal lighting compared to black light, so testing a small sample first is the best way to confirm the final look before using the pigment in a larger project.
Recommended Products
These products pair well with the Fluorescent Neon Beaver Dust Pigment Variety Pack when testing colours, making coasters, mixing epoxy, and choosing the right resin for your project depth.
- Small Reusable Silicone Molds - Great for making coasters, testing neon fluorescent pigment colours, pouring samples, and comparing different mica powder blends.
- Measuring Spoons - Helpful for measuring small, repeatable amounts of mica powder for epoxy resin and craft projects.
- Paddle Mixer for Epoxy Resin - Helps mix pigment smoothly and evenly into epoxy resin.
- Shallow Pour Epoxy - Recommended for coating, sealing, and shallow epoxy pours up to 1/4" deep.
- Small Project Resin - A good option for small epoxy projects and pours from 1/4" to 1" deep.
- Deep Pour Epoxy - Designed for deeper epoxy pours from 1/2" deep up to 2" deep.
Helpful Pigment Guides
These guides can help you learn more about mica powder, epoxy pigment testing, resin art, river table colour choices, and using pigments in woodworking and craft projects.
- Mica Powder for Epoxy Resin - Learn how mica powder behaves in epoxy resin pours, woodworking, and art projects.
- How to Use Mica Powder in Epoxy - Simple tips for mixing mica powder smoothly into epoxy resin.
- Mica Powder for Resin Art - Explore mica powder ideas for coasters, trays, fluid pours, jewelry, and decorative resin pieces.
- Mica Powder for River Tables - Learn how mica powder can be used in epoxy river pours, void fills, and woodworking projects.
- Pigment Guides - Browse Beaver Dust pigment guides for epoxy resin, resin art, candles, soap making, coatings, and crafts.
FAQ
How many colours are included in Variety Pack #11?
Variety Pack #11 includes 8 fluorescent neon Beaver Dust Pigments, with each colour weighed at 10 grams.
Are fluorescent pigments the same as neon pigments?
Many customers refer to fluorescent pigments as neon pigments because of their bright, high-energy colour. These pigments are vibrant under normal lighting and are designed to stand out even more under black light.
Do these pigments work under black light?
Yes. The Fluorescent line is designed for maximum effect under black light, while still appearing bright and vibrant under normal lighting.
Can I use this mica powder variety pack in epoxy resin?
Yes. Beaver Dust Pigments can be used in epoxy resin, resin art, woodworking projects, river tables, coasters, trays, charcuterie boards, and decorative resin applications.
Is this pack good for coasters and sample pours?
Yes. This pack works very well for coasters and sample pours. Small reusable silicone molds are a helpful way to test each colour, compare pigment amounts, and see how the colours look under normal light and black light.
Can I mix the fluorescent colours together?
Yes. Colours in this variety pack can be mixed with each other to create custom neon green, hot pink, bright orange, electric purple, fluorescent blue, magenta, and high-contrast colour effects.
How much fluorescent pigment should I use?
A good starting point for the Fluorescent line is approximately 1/2 teaspoon per 1 litre of epoxy for a stronger effect. You can adjust based on the intensity and opacity you want.
Will these pigments sink in epoxy?
Beaver Dust Pigments are under 60 microns, which helps them stay suspended in epoxy while it cures instead of sinking to the bottom like larger or heavier pigment particles can.
Can I use these pigments for candles and soap?
These pigments can be tested in candle making and soap making, but results may vary depending on your wax, soap base, fragrance, process, lighting, and the amount used. Always test a small batch first.
Can I use these pigments in paint, coatings, clear coats, or automotive applications?
These pigments can be tested in compatible systems, but results depend on the exact material, process, and application. Always test first before using them in a finished project.
Shop Beaver Dust Pigments
Use Beaver Dust Pigments Variety Pack #11 - Fluorescent Neon Colours when you want to test 8 bright fluorescent mica powder colours for epoxy resin, black light projects, resin art, woodworking projects, candles, soap making, and crafts.