View Full Version : Retail Pickup Packaging
JGundry
10-05-2006, 07:23 AM
I have a few retail shops interested in carrying my humbuckers. I'm trying to locate a source for clear plastic cases, foam inserts and silk screening. Is there a one stop shop for all three or do they have to be sourced separately. I have found a few sources for the cases but the sizes tend to be way too big or just too small. For the foam I just want a small a thin piece to put in the bottom of the case. I assume the silkscreening could be done by the box vendor but the vendors I have run across don't offer silk screening. Any suggestions would be appreciated.
Satamax
10-05-2006, 08:55 AM
Try to be creative and cool!
A wooden box would look cool, and potheads musicians could keep their stash of buds in there after :D And other ones could keep their plecs in there. As for silk screening, why don't you buy some "stickers" sheets and print some with a printer? For the foam, any shop who does kniting and sewing should have some kind of foam that you can recut.
Steve Conner
10-05-2006, 12:30 PM
Have you tried looking for jewelry gift boxes on eBay? Nice site btw!
David Schwab
10-05-2006, 02:25 PM
I decided to use small craft boxes.. they are brown cardboard and have a folding flap lid. I then put a label with my logo on the top.
I figured they were more environmentally friendly, and cheaper than plastic boxes too. Plus I couldn't find any plastic boxes to start with.
I wrap the pickup in a little bubble wrap first.
Just Bob
10-05-2006, 03:40 PM
www.usbox.com has those plastic hinged boxes in most any size and type of plastic. They tend to be fairly expensive, like a dollar a box for pickup sizes. Silk screening is way expensive. Screen charges plus setup jigs and stuff. Large minimums, like a couple gross. A folded card insert is a more usual. With a diecut hole so you can see the item inside or just folded so the top doesn't cover the whole box. . Or, a transparent self-stick label. Any time you talk printing, it isn't cost effective until you do thousands. I just print my own on clear self-stick labels.
JGundry
10-05-2006, 04:37 PM
Thanks for all the suggestions. Keep them coming. www.usbox.com has been the best deal on boxes I have found so far. I ordered some clear acetate stickers from them a couple of weeks ago to stick on the outside of a clear box. They look pretty good but the adhesive is not quite crystal clear. I still think silk screeing might be the way to go.
Just Bob
10-05-2006, 05:18 PM
Packaging is an art in itself and can be pretty expensive for anything nice. I suspect a lot of time the package is more expensive than the item inside. I did some package design years ago for high-volume stuff. We spent a couple dollars per unit just on the package. Makes a big difference in sales to have a slick package.
Somebody must do it, but I've yet to find anybody who actually does screening onto boxes. Probably a lot of labor. You can't just put a stack of stuff into the press. A lot of what you see isn't screened. Its' printed on a flexographic printer. Looks similar but its a whole different animal in terms of costs. Cheap per piece, but expensive setup.
What you see fairly often is plastic sleeves. Print on a clear plastic sheet and wrap it around the box. Commercial ones are usually heat sealed, but you see them taped too. That has the extra benefit that it makes it harder for people to open the box in the store and loose pieces. Some of those blister packs need a crowbar and chisel to get them open.
David Schwab
10-05-2006, 07:45 PM
www.usbox.com has those plastic hinged boxes in most any size and type of plastic.
That's where I ended up getting my boxes from.
Brown Kraft Cardboard Paper Gift Boxes (http://www.usbox.com/Box/brown_kraft_giftware_box.html)
Sock Puppet
10-05-2006, 09:20 PM
I'm with David on the environment there but if you need a cheap box that'll last 20,000 years then I've seen them on ebay (u.k.) by the hundreds.
They're a clear two part box used for business card package and display.
You could get them hot foil printed or use a card insert...
.... and use popcorn for the disposeable packing.
S.
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