|
TKB Trading Mermaid Collection: silver white, gold dust, blue diamond, seawitch green, fairy violet, siren red
|
This post is a little bit different; the polishes I’m going to show you are not commercially available. I mixed them myself using pigments and suspension base, both available at TKB Trading (the bottles are also from TKB). These six polishes are made from TKB’s Mermaid Collection iridescent pigments.
When I was ordering from TKB, I couldn’t find any swatches of nail polishes made with these pigments, and although they looked neat, I really had no idea of how they would look. So, I’m posting these swatches in case anyone else is searching for photos of how these pigments look mixed up in nail polish base.
|
TKB Trading Mermaid Collection Swatches: Silver White, Gold Dust, Blue Diamond, Seawitch Green, Fairy Violet, Siren Red |
When I mixed up the nail polishes, I wasn’t sure what density of pigment would look best. So, these first swatches are all six pigments very concentrated in the polish. This gives a glass fleck type look – it reminds me of some Zoyas.
Here are close-ups of the swatches:
|
TKB Silver White, Gold Dust |
Silver white is a true, light silver. Gold dust is a yellow-gold; it’s similar to Essie As Gold As It Gets at the right density.
|
TKB Blue Diamond, Seawitch Green |
Blue Diamond is a sapphire blue; Seawitch green is a pale green. It looks more blue in the picture than it actually is because of the reflections from the blue.
|
TKB Fairy Violet, Siren Red |
Fairy Violet is my favorite – it has multiple shades of purple in it. Siren Red is a pink-red that seems to have some orange in it too.
I also wanted to see what these would look like if they were mixed more sparsely into the nail polish base, so I tried it out with Blue Diamond.
|
TKB Blue Diamond |
I love this look too – I’m definitely going to mix up bottles of each of the colors at a lower density like this one.
These are really gorgeous pigments – if you are into frankening nail polish, I highly, highly recommend them. I bought a set of samples of each color (2.5g each) for $7.50; you can also buy individuals samples and larger quantities. I think I used about 1/5 or less of a sample bag to make half a densely-packed mini (5ml) nail polish, so I’d guess that you could make a couple densely packed 5ml nail polishes plus several sparse ones with one bag.
If you’re new to frankening, make sure you get suspension base; if you mix these with regular clear nail polish they will probably sink to the bottom rather than remaining evenly mixed throughout. I used TKB’s Glamour base, but I think their Luster base would work for these as well.
——–
This post is from Project Swatch. All rights reserved.