Why White Pigment Paste Changes Everything in Resin Art 🤍

White pigment paste is probably the most underestimated product in every resin artist's workshop.

Most people buy it to create ocean waves. But experienced artists know it does far more than that.

It can create delicate lacing, make transparent colors look richer, add depth to your artwork, improve contrast, and even completely change how your pigments behave.

Whether you're making ocean art, geodes, trays, clocks, or abstract resin paintings, understanding white pigment paste will instantly expand your creative possibilities.

Let's look at the three ways professionals use it—and a few tricks you may not have tried yet. ✨

White pigment paste ratio chart for ocean resin art cells

Ocean Effect: Why White Creates Beautiful Cells

If you've ever watched two artists using almost identical colors but getting completely different ocean effects, white pigment paste is often the missing ingredient.

Unlike transparent dyes, white pigment paste contains opaque particles suspended in the resin. Combined with the right pouring technique and resin viscosity, these particles help create the flowing, lace-like patterns that make ocean art so mesmerizing.

The amount of white matters just as much as timing.

Every resin behaves a little differently, so don't be afraid to experiment until you find your perfect formula.

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Want Bigger, More Dramatic Cells?

Try adding a few drops of silicone oil to your white pigment mixture. It creates a stronger cell effect, making ocean waves look more dynamic and textured. Start with a very small amount — too much can make the pattern chaotic or affect the final surface. Always test on a sample first.

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Cells Disappearing or Getting Too Heavy?

If your cells disappear, try slightly increasing the amount of white. If they become thick and heavy, use a little less — or allow the resin to thicken before pouring.

🛒 What You Need for This Technique

Everything to get started with the ocean cell effect:

The Right Amount Makes All the Difference

Many artists assume that adding more white automatically creates better cells. Unfortunately, the opposite is often true — both too little and too much pigment will work against you. The goal is balance, and once you understand what each extreme looks like, finding that sweet spot becomes much easier.

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Too Little Pigment

The pattern becomes weak, the white almost disappears, and transparent colors dominate. The effect looks washed out rather than defined.

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Too Much Pigment

The design becomes heavy and dense, fine details disappear, and the white overpowers the composition. The result looks muddy instead of airy.

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Just Right — The Sweet Spot

The white creates soft, flowing movement without dominating the design. Colors interact naturally, cells form cleanly, and the overall effect looks elegant and intentional.

So how do you find that balance in practice? Start with these ratios and adjust from there based on your resin and technique.

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These Are Starting Points, Not Rules

Every resin, room temperature, working time, and artistic style can influence the final result. Always test on a small sample before applying to your final artwork — and keep notes so you can repeat what works.

Troubleshooting Your White Pigment

My pattern disappeared
Your white layer wasn't opaque enough. Try adding slightly more white pigment next time.
My white sank too quickly
The pigment became too heavy. Use slightly less pigment or wait longer before pouring so the resin viscosity increases.
My cells look thick and heavy
Too much white reduces the delicate, airy look. Lower the amount a little until you find the balance that works for your technique.
Results are unpredictable every time
Track the relationship between resin viscosity, pigment amount, pouring technique, and timing — once these four work together, results become far more predictable.

Timing Is Just as Important as Pigment

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Resin Changes Constantly

Epoxy resin becomes thicker throughout its working time. The exact same amount of white pigment can produce completely different results depending on when you pour it. Great Resin Art comes from understanding the relationship between:

  • Resin viscosity
  • Pigment amount
  • Pouring technique
  • Timing

🤍 Sometimes the most important color isn't the brightest one — it's the one that brings every other color to life.

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