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Any such thing as white pumice?
Posted by DavidW on July 9, 2015 at 7:19 pmHas anyone come across a supplier of a white pumice? Those who have told me they have white send a sample and it ends up being grey. I am making a micro-dermabraision cream and the customer insists on having some pumice in there but doesn’t like seeing grey specs in his white cream.
Thanks
DavidW replied 9 years, 4 months ago 7 Members · 11 Replies -
11 Replies
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Ouch. David, you have a problem.
Pumice is foamed, volcanic rock - I’ve never seen or heard of any that is any lighter than grey. Personally, I’d use the tiniest little bit of grey pumice, and much more of a white abrasive - that way you can put pumice on the ingredient label and call it a day. -
That is exactly what I was thinking I will need to do. I have seen some that vendors called “white” but when I get samples they aren’t.
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I have been using pumice but its more of grey and I don’t see too much white as such. We were doing what @Bobzchemist suggested but discontinued as the other abrasive was polyethylene. Still looking for something similar and which can effectively replace PE.
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Bentonite works well as a mild exfoliant in about 80 screen.
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Pumice is traditionally a darker colored abrasive volcanic rock. The white grade is usually grey to off white. I worked on a project with the material years ago. We got more whitening by reducing the initial concentration and adding some Zinc oxide. In the end we further reduced the pumice as it can be more abrasive than some other materials and will cause more exforiation (scraping).
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Thank you all.
@chemist77 Try Aluminum Oxide. It is white and comes in different grit sizes. I have a sample from a company called Gray Star LLC. If you need their info let me know. -
I use Bamboo exfoliant particles from lessonia! theyre white as snow!
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Caribbean natural products has a small grain pumice that doesn’t grey out too bad, but there’s always grey in pumice. If you, however, go with a fine enough grade, you can do what bobschemist said and go with a white abrasive. I’ve got this funny feeling that fine grade quartz is going to be the next big thing.
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