Shot in the dark and say you can use it as a cheap way to disrupt radar systems.
I genuinely don't think it's something humans eat or could be at risk of eating. No way that'd fly.
You best tell me son.Wtf! I work with it a few days a week. Our product goes out and people will put there mouth on it.
I also think toothpaste. And they don't want people to know because then people would feel weird about putting toothpaste in their mouth.
But would it need to be specific? Cause toothpaste already has do not eat and various warning labels on it.
I think I read OP wrong. I thought there was something odd in actual glitter but where it ends up is what they are talking about.
Due to its unique characteristics, glitter has also proven to be useful forensic evidence. Because of the tens of thousands of different commercial glitters, identical glitter particles can be compelling evidence that a suspect has been at a crime scene. Forensic scientist Edwin Jones has one of the largest collections of glitter consisting of over 1,000 different samples used in comparison of samples taken from crime scenes. Glitter particles are easily transferred through the air or by touch, yet cling to bodies and clothing, often unnoticed by suspects.[19]
Food of some sort
Something that we are putting in our pie holes
But would it need to be specific? Cause toothpaste already has do not eat and various warning labels on it.
Accounting for most of the company's sales and not wanting to keep it secret because people won't like glitter being in whatever it is, toothpaste seems like the best bet.
Those are holograms not glitter.I'm in Team Money. Those numbers that look metallic and change color when viewed from different angles? That's probably it. Nothing else is really worth the secrecy.
I think I read OP wrong. I thought there was something odd in actual glitter but where it ends up is what they are talking about.
Our product that contains glitter is on drinking containers.
That's concrete, I looked at having it done in my house.It's the coatings you use to coat garage floors, no? They have shiny sparkly bits in them.