




Buy anything from 5,000+ international stores. One checkout price. No surprise fees. Join 2M+ shoppers on Desertcart.
Desertcart purchases this item on your behalf and handles shipping, customs, and support to Poland.
🌈 Turn up the chill, turn on the thrill!
ATLANTA CHEMICAL ENGINEERING’s Low Temperature Thermochromic Pigment transforms from yellow to red at 59°F (15°C). This high-quality, non-toxic, reversible color-changing powder is micro-encapsulated for durability and versatility, compatible with a wide range of materials including paints, resins, and fabrics. Perfect for innovative arts, crafts, science projects, and dynamic product labeling, it delivers a captivating visual effect that resets with temperature changes, all proudly made in the USA.











| ASIN | B01MTX2DMM |
| Best Sellers Rank | #34,288 in Office Products ( See Top 100 in Office Products ) #18 in Paint Making Materials |
| Brand Name | ATLANTA CHEMICAL ENGINEERING |
| Color | Yellow-Red 59F/15C |
| Compatible Material | Leather |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars (1,032) |
| Included Components | glue |
| Item Form | amorphous, gelatinous |
| Item Type Name | Color Changing Pigment |
| Item Weight | 0.02 Kilograms |
| Manufacturer | Atlanta Chemical Engineering |
| Manufacturer Part Number | 1234 |
| Model Number | 1234 |
| Number of Items | 1 |
F**H
Color changing effect is amazing!!!!! Works fast with color changing, mixed it with resin. My only complaint is that it is a little foggy and not fully transparent. Will be purchasing more colors!! 👍
K**B
This product works amazing. Do yourself a favour and get them. I got the 10 gram black to colourless and omg.. There was so much more than what I thought there would be. I also got their 3 pack 5gram,and same. So much in the tubs. You only need a little tiny bit to achieve what I used it for. Love it and will definitely get more soon. Thank you!!
A**R
This RED-YELLOW pigment works well for slime. The temperature of just your hands is enough to initiate the colour change from coral to orangey-yellow and yellow. If you use a cold jell pack on it you can change the colour from a coral to a deeper red. The visual effects were really good and the children enjoyed playing with the slime to make the colour change. Easy to blend into the glue when mixing. But expensive if you are just making slime at home, as one 10g jar can make one bigger batch of slime (2 bottles of 4oz of glue) or two smaller batches of slime (1 bottle of 4oz glue each batch). Great for school STEAM activities though, as schools would have an expense budget. The recipe I used was as follows: 1 4oz bottle white glue, 1/2 to 1 teaspoon baking soda, 2 teaspoons contact lense solution. The BLACK-PINK product wasn't good. The colour when mixed with white glue is dark purple. It doesn't seem to change colours with the heat of your hands when handled. Did not get it to go pink at all, perhaps it needs a stronger heat source? It changes to black when an ice pack is applied. Not a great visual as the disparity between the dark purple and the black is not great. Wouldn't recommend.
F**.
I've bought the Yellow-Red @59, Red-Yellow @77, Black-Clear @77, Black-Pink @88, Red-Clear @88 and tried almost all of them. My first attempt was to put Red-Clear @88 and Black-Clear @77 in some big box epoxy and inject it into a ring mold... that worked great and the color is super red. Two things I immediately discovered: 1) You can't expect a powder pigment to turn crystal clear. It turns translucent/opaque white. I don't know why I expected a powder to disappear 😅. 2) Finger 'body' temperature is WAY below 88F in the winter... so only the Black-Clear 'kicks' and only a little... In the summer I'm certain to have the perfect disappearing ring. Once I got an idea of how it mixed and reacted to the epoxy I went full in on a new project. I poured some TotalBoat epoxy in a knife handle blade to 90% full, let it kick for a bit, then mixed in Red-Clear @88 and drizzled it on top. I was totally blown away. It looks amazing... the red is so vibrant. I just eyeballed the amount to use and it came out great. Last I had a rainy Sunday project with my daughter. we poured some top coat nail polish into a cup and mixed in some pigments and did different nails. Then top-coated them in clear. The best temperature reaction I think is the Yellow-Red @59. Super fun and she loved the process. And according to their instructions, while you shouldn't eat the stuff, it is safe to handle. This stuff is awesome and I'm working on ways to incorporate all the color/temp combos in my work. It's going to be great to have different dimensions of effect that 'kick' at varying temperatures. Just need a truly-clear transparent! 🤣 But instead of that I'd do with a Red-Clear @77... ooooh.. or Clear-Red@77! SCIENCE MAKE IT HAPPEN!
K**N
I have been doing my own nails for a few years now and tend to lean towards the dip powders that change color with the temperature. After I came across a video of someone making their own powder I wanted to give it a shot. I took a chance with this product and mixed it with clear dip powder, after a couple experimental fake nails I got the consistency I wanted. This product went above my expectations and was a lot easier to use than I anticipated.
Trustpilot
3 days ago
2 weeks ago