– Mix luster dust directly into royal icing before piping for full-coverage shimmer
– Dust dry luster dust over set icing for a more metallic, high-shine finish
– Gold and silver give the most dramatic results — white adds a subtle pearl glow
– Royal icing must be fully dry before dusting or the powder clumps
Royal icing that actually shimmers. Mix Gold Luster Dust straight into the icing, or dust it on after — either way, the results are ridiculous. This is the fastest upgrade your cookie decorating routine will ever get.
Ingredients
Ingredients
- 3 cups Powdered sugar, sifted
- 2 tbsp Meringue powder
- 5-6 tbsp Warm water
- 1/2 tsp Vanilla extract (clear, to keep icing white)
- 1/2-1 tsp Gold Luster Dust
- 1/2-1 tsp Silver Luster Dust
- 1/2-1 tsp White Luster Dust (optional, for pearl finish)
Instructions
Combine powdered sugar and meringue powder in a stand mixer with the whisk attachment. Add 5 tablespoons of warm water and the vanilla. Mix on medium-high for 5-7 minutes until thick, glossy, and white. Add the last tablespoon of water if it’s too stiff to pipe — you want it to hold its shape but flow smoothly out of the bag.
Two ways to do this, and they give different results. Mix-in: whisk luster dust directly into the finished icing before it goes in the piping bag. You’ll get shimmer baked right into every bit of coverage. Dust-on: flood and pipe your cookies first, let them dry completely (minimum 4 hours, overnight is better), then brush dry luster dust over the surface with a soft food-safe brush. The dust-on method gives a more metallic, almost chrome finish.
Add 1/2 teaspoon of luster dust per cup of icing. Whisk thoroughly — you want even distribution, no streaks. Taste it. You should taste nothing, which is exactly right. The icing should look slightly shimmery even in the bowl. It gets more dramatic once it dries on the cookie.
Fill your piping bag, outline the cookie edges with a #2 tip, then flood the centers with thinned icing. If you want multiple colors of shimmer on one cookie, work section by section while the icing is still wet so the edges blend, or let each section dry fully for clean lines.
Once the icing is bone dry, dip a soft brush into your luster dust and tap off the excess before touching it to the cookie. Light, circular strokes. You can build up coverage, but you can’t take it back. Gold on white icing reads warm and luxe. Silver on white looks almost liquid.

Tips
The dust-on method, by a lot. Mixing luster dust into wet icing gives you a beautiful all-over shimmer, but some of that metallic effect gets lost as the icing dries. Dusting over a dry white base lets the light catch the powder on the surface with nothing muting it. If you want cookies that look painted in gold or silver, dry-dust every time. If you want shimmer throughout and don’t want to do a two-step process, mix it in.
Every color works, but gold, silver, and white are the workhorses for cookies. Gold on cut-out holiday shapes. Silver on wedding cookies. White on anything you want to look like it has a pearl finish — christening cookies, baby shower sets. For more on technique across different baked goods, the guide on [how to use edible glitter on cakes, cupcakes and cookies](https://lusterdust.com/how-to-use-edible-glitter-on-cakes-cupcakes-cookies/) has the full breakdown.
The icing wasn’t fully dry. Even if it looks set on top, there can be moisture underneath — especially if your kitchen is humid. Give it the full overnight dry and the dust will sit on the surface cleanly instead of grabbing and clumping. Also make sure your brush is completely dry before you dip it into the jar. One drop of moisture in the jar ruins the whole thing.


