







✨ Elevate your craft with gold-standard brass brilliance ⚡
Holama’s Brass Powder is a high-grade 320 mesh Cu-Zn alloy designed for cold casting and inlay artistry. Packaged in an anti-oxidation aluminum foil jar, it maintains 99.8% purity for vibrant, long-lasting metallic finishes. Ideal for professional artists and makers, it blends effortlessly with resins and adhesives to create stunning sculptures, décor, and custom metal effects that stand out in any creative space.








| ASIN | B0D54HPV5B |
| Best Sellers Rank | #42,441 in Arts, Crafts & Sewing ( See Top 100 in Arts, Crafts & Sewing ) #378 in Sculpture Molding & Casting Products |
| Customer Reviews | 4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars (46) |
| Date First Available | May 27, 2024 |
| Item Weight | 1.1 pounds |
| Item model number | Brass Powder320350 |
| Manufacturer | holama |
| Product Dimensions | 3 x 3 x 3 inches |
J**R
Versatile, but not a stand-in for Mica
Super fine, no contaminants Be aware (as I am now) that it's tricky to polish or burnish the powder when suspended in a finish/paint. It goes on exactly the way it looks in the can - septic brown. Sanding will oxidize the hell out of it and smear green patina all around. Wet sanding with alcohol works pretty well to mitigate that, just be careful what you are using it on, as alcohol itself will thin or ruin some paints. I had success polishing it over paints with the alcohol sanding and, also, by burnishing the paint with a clean polished spoon (you don't polish your spoons?). However, if you're trying to use it as I was, know that it's much better to use it topically rather than integrating into a medium. I tried adding into clear varnish and, again, just clouds the medium and makes it impossible to polish. Adding it *onto* the wet varnish, however, looks awesome after polishing. I also tried fine steel wool to burnish without success, which kind of surprised me. It seems like it should work. Maybe it was just user error on my part. Here's a cool trick I learned with it: use a thin coat of (preferably high viscosity) CA glue and sift the brass powder on top, heavy, like powdered sugar before it dries. Brush off excess, then burnish by rubbing with moderate pressure using aforementioned soupware. It leaves a clean and uniform polished brass coating which looks awesome as an inlay or as faux plating. Bonus round: hit it briefly with a low flame, ie., a lighter. Some science happens and it makes it look like poured gold 🙂 Very cool! Definitely fun to play around with! I look forward to further avoiding responsibilities in the name of artistic science.
D**L
High quality
I use this powdered brass as inlay in the cracks and voids of the mesquite bowls I turn. It polishes up very nicely. Very impressive and reasonably priced.
B**R
Rich gold color.
Product looks light green in container but polished up beautifully to a rich gold color. Easy to work with.
W**T
Fine grade powder. May require a lot of sanding/polishing to get a high metallic sheen
This brass powder is very fine and will mix in quite well, or you can dust your mold with it. Make sure to use enough powder. In order to get a realistic poloshed metallic look with a high shine, you may need to sand and polish it quite a bit - it may take a couple tries in order to achieve the look you want, so perhaps start with a couple smaller pieces until you are able to perfect your process. *Don't rely on the product images in the listing to accurately represent the color. If you look at the different metallic shades available, they all have the identical images, except for the color - they are clearly photoshopped.
K**D
It is what is advertised
Perfect
T**N
Starts green and stays green
I mixed the powder exactly to the specs provided. The mix was green, but I assumed that was due to oxidation of the brass and that the sheen would return when polished. It didn't. The pics are the sanded fill and the remainder from the mixing cup. I'm not sure if this is even brass powder or just some type of scam?
M**M
Works very well for inlay work.
It does not look like brass in the container, but has more of a copper cast. Don't let that bother you - it polishes to a nice brassy finish. In the attached picture, I laser-etched a lightning bolt into walnut and filled it with the powder. Then I saturated the area with thin super glue, let dry, sanded and polished. The finish was exactly what I was looking for.
J**N
More brown than gold
It comes out brownish green for me.
A**O
Excellent product. Cold to touch, heavy and real metal powder. Price meh... but what can you do when the country hits inflation and trump grabs into your pocket and hustles your money.
TrustPilot
2 周前
1 个月前