✦ FDA Compliant ✦ Vegan & Gluten-Free ✦ German Mica Pigments ✦ Free Shipping Over $50 ✦ 13 Colors
March 21, 2026 · 5 min read

Edible Glitter for Vegan Baking

Edible vegan glitter luster dust jars in gold, silver, and pink beside a chocolate ganache cake and shimmer cupcakes
Key Takeaways

  • All Luster Dust colors are 100% vegan — made with mica-based pigments, no animal-derived ingredients, ever.
  • Vegan and food safe aren’t the same thing. A lot of glitter on the market is neither. Ours is both.
  • Works on every surface vegan bakers use — buttercream, ganache, fondant, naked cakes, and more.
  • One 10g jar covers dozens of cakes. You don’t need much.

Here’s a question we get a lot: is edible glitter vegan? Short answer — ours is. Every single color. No beeswax, no carmine, no shellac. Just mica pigments and FDA-compliant food-safe colorants, the same ingredients that have been in food for decades.

The longer answer is that “edible vegan glitter” is a messier category than it should be. Some products marketed as edible contain shellac (a resin secreted by lac bugs — not vegan). Others use carmine, which is derived from crushed beetles. And a surprising number of sparkly products on Amazon aren’t edible at all — they’re craft glitters with “non-toxic” on the label, which is not the same thing as food safe. We broke that down in detail in our guide to edible glitter safety.

So if you’re baking vegan and you want shimmer, here’s what actually matters and how to use it well.

What Makes Luster Dust Vegan

Our luster dust is made from German mica pigments — a naturally occurring mineral — combined with FDA-compliant colorants. That’s it. No binders from animal sources, no insect-derived dyes, no hidden non-vegan additives. Tasteless, odorless, completely plant-based.

If you want the full ingredient picture, this post breaks down exactly what’s in edible glitter and why mica is the gold standard for food-safe shimmer. Worth a read if you care about what goes into your food — which, if you’re baking vegan, you probably do.

How to Use It on Vegan Bakes


The surface you’re working on matters. Vegan buttercream — usually made with plant-based butter or shortening — takes luster dust beautifully. The slightly smooth, glossy finish on a well-crusted vegan buttercream is actually ideal. Dust on dry with a clean pastry brush for a soft shimmer. Mix with a few drops of vodka (it evaporates) for a more saturated, painted effect.

Chocolate ganache made with coconut cream is another great canvas. Gold Luster Dust on dark chocolate ganache looks genuinely expensive — like, “did you buy this at a high-end bakery” expensive. We’ve seen bakeries charge $10+ per slice just from the visual alone.

Naked cakes with exposed sponge are trickier. The texture absorbs the dust more than smooth frosting does. Still works — just use a slightly heavier hand.


Edible glitter food safe gold luster dust being brushed over a chocolate ganache layer cake on white marble
This edible glitter food safe gold luster dust adds a show-stopping shimmer to any chocolate ganache cake.

A Note on Quantities

Less is more, and that’s not just a saying here. A 10g jar is 1/3 oz — sounds small, but a single dusting session on a six-inch cake might use 1/16 teaspoon. Do the math and that jar goes a long way. For reference: 10g covers roughly 80 cocktails or a couple dozen cupcakes, depending on application.

Start light. You can always add more. Overdoing it looks chalky, not shimmery — and no one wants a chalky cake.

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