Dyes: Dyes are soluble colorants that dissolve into a solvent or water to deliver color at the molecular level. That solubility gives you bright, transparent shades. The trade-off? Dyes are designed to color textiles[LB2.1]. Their functionality also limits compatibility, and they tend to migrate, leaving marks on surfaces, skin, equipment, and fabric that are difficult to remove.
Pigments: Pigments are insoluble solid particles dispersed throughout a material rather than dissolved in it. Because they resist dissolving, they're designed to be insoluble, which is precisely what makes them difficult to work with in liquid systems. They offer stronger lightfastness and opacity than dyes, but they require dispersion equipment, can settle over time, and are notorious for staining hard surfaces, skin, and production equipment.
Liquid polymeric colorants: This is where the color chemistry fundamentally changes. Liquitint™ polymeric colorants bond a chromophore—the color-carrying molecule—to a polymer backbone. The result is a liquid colorant that achieves total water solubility, low viscosity, and a non-settling, non-blocking format. Critically, Liquitint™ colorants are designed to have low attraction to most surfaces, directly addressing the migration and staining that make traditional dyes and pigments so difficult to manage. You get the brightness of a dye with a dramatically cleaner handling profile.
Three approaches with three very different outcomes for your formulation. Understanding your options helps inform your color needs and how to best source color for a specific purpose.