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How to Work with Your Supplier on Color Matching and Stability for Silicone Materials

Multi-color silicone sheet mixing for silicone color matching and stability control

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The initial sample looks flawless, and the subsequent production procedure yields a slightly different hue – this is one of the most frequent complaints in colored silicone projects.

It is not just a matter of whether to use a Pantone or not, it is also a question of how you and your supplier communicate, test and control color matching and color stability between lab samples and mass production. The matching of color and stability are based on the silicone formulation and your interaction with your supplier. Even a good factory will find it hard to recreate the same color every time, without clear references, agreed tolerances and proper QC. For a deeper understanding of the technical variables involved, see our guide on color consistency in mass production.

Why Material and Application Come First

Although you speak of color, get on the same page regarding material and application. You cannot talk about color on its own. The hardness, type of base silicone (HCR or LSR), cure system (platinum or peroxide) and the final application all have an impact on what pigments may be used and how stable the color will be. There is yet another layer compliance requirements impose: food-contact or skin-contact regulations often restrict the use of pigments to only that which is safe and low-odor. 

For example, as outlined in our silicone materials & selection guide, choosing the right silicone grade and application fit is the foundation for any successful color project. The same logic applies to regulatory needs — see our compliance checklist for silicone materials in food- and skin-contact products for details on pigment restrictions.

Here’s how different applications shape the color conversation:

Application TypeWhat It Means for Color Discussions
Food-contact kitchenware / baby itemsLimited pigment choices, strict testing and odor constraints
Skin-contact wearablesFocus on irritation, sweat resistance, and stain visibility
Outdoor / UV-exposed productsUV stability and fading resistance are critical
Industrial/automotive partsHeat resistance and chemical exposure impact color stability
Silicone sheet production for color consistency in mass production

Give Your Supplier Clear, Concrete Color References

Generalized instructions like a bit more blue or similar to our old product seldom come to the same conclusions. The closer are your references, the quicker and more accurate is the match.

Include one or more of the following: 

  • Standardized color references in the form of Pantone color matching or other standardized color references.
  • Physical samples (past parts or printed color chips), where available.
  •  Proper guidelines regarding gloss and matte surface finish and opacity and translucency.

Whatever is most important to your project – the precise hue, expense or lead time – should be mentioned at the outset. 

Reference TypeWhat It Is Good For
Pantone / color codeClear, shared digital reference for base hue
Physical sample partReal-world perception, including texture and finish
Printed or digital mock-upGeneral direction only (needs translation into silicone)

Understand How Silicone Color Matching Is Done on the Supplier Side

Silicone color matching on the factory side is a repeatable yet chemistry driven process. In the case of solid silicone (HCR) technicians normally use color masterbatch or ready to use pigments. In the case of liquid silicone rubber (LSR), they are dependent on liquid colorants and the use of precise inline dosing systems.

The cure chemistry, surface finish and thickness of the cured silicone can cause the final color to be different than the raw mix in the cup. This is the reason why suppliers are using spectrophotometers to measure ΔE values, record the precise pigment ratios and prepare trial slabs under controlled conditions. 

Supplier StepWhat They Actually Do
FormulationChoose pigments compatible with the silicone grade
Lab mixing and trial slabsMix, cure and create small test samples
Measurement and viewingCheck color by eye and with instruments
AdjustmentFine-tune pigment ratios and repeat if needed
Multi-color silicone sheet mixing for silicone color matching and stability control

Agree on What “Acceptable Color Difference” Means

No production process can ensure a zero difference in all lighting conditions, under all viewing angles. This is why it is vital to establish silicone color tolerances in combination.

The difference between the colors in the industry standard is known as ΔE. The smaller the number the more similar. Speak about the level that is realistic to your product and brand standards. 

Tolerance LevelPractical Meaning
Very tight (e.g. ΔE ≤ 1–1.5)High consistency, higher cost/time for adjustments
Moderate (ΔE ≈ 2–3)Good mass-production balance
Loose (>3)More visible variation but easier, cheaper to run

Request your supplier to provide side-by-side photos or physical sample under the same exact lighting you will be using to inspect the final product. This graphic source helps to avoid subsequent disputes. 

Build a Clear Color Approval Process with Your Supplier

An approved process will eliminate guesswork and safeguard both parties. Stages are usually in the following form: 

StepWho Does WhatWhat Gets Documented
1You send color references and requirementsColor codes, samples, application details
2Supplier makes and sends color samplesSample IDs, mix ratios, test conditions
3You review and approve/adjustApproved reference sample + any comments
4Supplier records the final formulationPigment ratios, process settings, ΔE if measured

Write it all out. After approval, the reference sample will become the golden standard to be used in future production. Strong quality control processes ensure this standard is maintained throughout mass production.

Plan for Color Stability: Aging, Light and Environment

Silicone color stability is approximately the manner in which the color maintains itself over the life span of the product. Shifts can occur due to UV light, heat, chemicals, repeated cleaning, and even time itself.

Communicate these aspects with your supplier at an early stage. Inquire about the high lightfastness of the pigments they use, any UV stabilizer or antioxidants in their formulations and whether there is any accelerated aging testing available that you can use. 

For projects that require long-term validation, how to validate your silicone material choice with testing and pilot runs offers a practical framework for checking stability before full production.

Environment / StressWhat to Ask and Check
Outdoor / UV exposureUV-resistant pigments, UV aging test results
High-temperature useStability of pigments at operating temperatures
Frequent washing / cleaningResistance to detergents or disinfectants
Skin contact and sweatStain resistance and color transfer

Keep Color Consistency Under Control in Mass Production

After the color is passed the actual work is to ensure the consistency of silicone color in mass production. The typical causes of batch-to-batch variation are small differences in pigment weighing, mixing time or molding conditions.

A strict production color control checklist should be adhered to by your supplier: 

Control PointWhat the Supplier Should Do
Pigment weighing and mixingFollow documented formulation exactly
Process parametersKeep molding conditions within defined range
In-process visual checksCompare with golden sample under set lighting
Periodic instrument checksUse spectrophotometer where available
White raw silicone material for custom color formulation and pigment testing

For a deeper look at the variables that can affect results at scale, read what affects color consistency in mass-produced silicone parts.

Typical Color-Related Problems and How to Discuss Them with Your Supplier

Despite the most effective preparation, problems might appear. The trick is to deal with them in a constructive way instead of laying the blame. The following are some of the typical challenges and how established teams manage them: 

IssueLikely Cause or FactorHow to Discuss with Supplier
Slightly different shadeTolerance, pigment or process driftShare photos, request re-check of formulation
Uneven / streaky colorPoor pigment dispersionAsk about mixing process and adjustments
Fading after outdoor useLow UV stability pigmentsRequest UV-stable pigments and aging tests
Color varies by batchInconsistent ratios or conditionsReview QC records and tighten process limits
Unexpected translucency shiftThickness or cure variationConfirm part geometry and process parameters
Surface finish mismatchGloss level or mold surface differenceProvide reference sample with exact finish spec

Conclusion — Color Reliability Comes from Collaboration, Not Guesswork

Clearly communicated, agreed tolerances, documented formulations, and shared responsibility among brand and supplier are the result of consistent, stable silicone colors. This can be accomplished by investing a little extra effort in the color-matching and approval stage to prevent the costly re-work and brand inconsistency later on.

By considering silicone color matching and silicone color stability as a joint technical operation and not as a simple design request, you and your supplier form a reliable system… Working with an experienced partner offering full OEM & ODM silicone manufacturing support makes this collaboration far more effective. that will provide the same appearance in the first sample to the hundredth production run. The clearer and more organized your cooperation, the more positive the result of all participants. 

HT Silicone

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