Dry Color

Overview

Chroma started doing business over forty years ago, providing dry blend pigments and other additives for thermoplastic products. Today, this process remains an economic method of providing colorant and is still widely used. Our time tested formulations and the use of high intensity mixing processes for optimum color development and consistency produce agglomerate free blends with excellent pigment dispersion. Recognizing the importance of this history and experience, the most demanding processors turn to Chroma for precisely formulated colors, tailored to the heating and mixing cycle of their processes. Bulk dry color carries a minimum order size of five pounds and is generally packaged in bags, boxes, drums, or gaylords. Our custom tailored unitizing services allow you to improve plant cleanliness and reduce labor costs by packaging a pre-weighted amount of dry color in a sealed bag designed to be added to a pre-determined amount of resin. Assorted bag sizes allow for a variety of unit size requirements.

Advantages

Delivery

Molding Applications

Product Stability

The Challenge

Challenge Chroma to demonstrate how our commitment to EXCELLENCE IN COLOR can make a meaningful contribution to the success of your business.

Technical Specifications

Resin Compatibility
Chroma develops dry color and additive formulations for the following thermoplastic resins:

  Engineering Resins
Olefins,
EVA, EMA, EEA,
Styrenics,
TPE, TPR, TPU, PVC

Polycarbonate
Nylons
Polyesters
Acetal
Sulfone polymers
Polyphenylene sulfide
Acrylics
Cellulosics
ABS
Polypropylene

Chroma's equipment permits us to provide superior dispersions of colorants with loadings tailored for the most efficient use in your processes.

Our modern Color Matching and Quality Control Laboratories are staffed with experienced technicians to provide you with the timely and reliable new color matches and product analyses your business requires.

The above listing of thermoplastics is generic. Compatibility with a specific resin may need to be verified. Due to chemical differences in materials, a color matched for one resin may not be the same color or have the same compatibility in another resin.