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Talk to Packaging Engineer

Odin Lao
Selina Chen
Jeff Lee
Kathy Wu
Engineering Team
Get expert guidance on box structure, paperboard selection, dieline setup, printing, finishing, MOQ, sampling, and production details before starting your custom packaging quote.

Packaging engineering typically covers structure, materials, manufacturing process, cost efficiency, and product protection, so this wording is aligned with real branded packaging decision points.

Request a Custom Packaging Quote for Paper Packaging

A custom packaging quote gives your procurement, branding, or product team a clear cost estimate based on box style, MOQ, dieline, paperboard type, printing method, finish, sample approval, lead time, and export requirements. Share your specifications and we will recommend the most practical packaging structure for wholesale production.

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To receive an accurate custom packaging quote, send your box style, dimensions, quantity, material preference, printing method, finish, artwork file or dieline, shipping destination, and required delivery date. If you do not have a dieline, we can help define the structure based on your product size and packaging goal.
Frequently Asked Questions
Review the common questions below about MOQ, dielines, rigid boxes, folding cartons, printing, recyclable materials, child-resistant packaging, sampling, and production lead times. For project-specific answers, contact our packaging team.
To receive an accurate custom packaging quote, send your box style, dimensions, order quantity, material preference, printing method, finish, artwork file or dieline, shipping destination, and target delivery date. If you do not have a dieline, we can help define the structure based on your product size and packaging goal.
Generally speaking, it is 500 pcs at the start. MOQ depends on the packaging type, material, printing process, finish, and order complexity. Folding cartons usually have different production requirements from rigid gift boxes, corrugated cartons, or paper tube boxes. For the most accurate MOQ, provide your box size, structure, quantity target, and artwork requirements.
Yes. A typical workflow includes structural confirmation, dieline creation or review, artwork placement, white sample or printed sample, pre-production approval, and then mass production. This process helps confirm fit, print position, folding accuracy, and overall presentation before bulk manufacturing.
Yes. We can create or adjust a dieline based on your product size, packaging structure, opening style, insert needs, and branding layout. A dieline helps define cut lines, fold lines, glue areas, bleed zones, and artwork placement before sampling or mass production.
Rigid boxes are made from thicker board and are often used for premium gift packaging, cosmetics, jewelry, candles, perfumes, and electronics. Folding cartons are lighter, foldable, and more cost-efficient for retail products. The best option depends on your product weight, presentation needs, MOQ, budget, and shipping method.
Yes. CMYK printing is commonly used for full-color artwork, while Pantone spot colors are preferred when brand color consistency is critical. For high-value packaging projects, we recommend digital proofs or printed samples before mass production to confirm color accuracy, logo placement, and finish quality.
Yes. Custom packaging can be developed with recyclable paperboard, kraft paper, corrugated board, and FSC paper options where available. FSC describes its certification system as a way to verify that forest-based materials come from responsibly managed sources and controlled supply chains.
Yes. We can support child-resistant packaging structure review, labeling space, tamper-evident design options, and documentation preparation. ASTM D3475 classifies child-resistant packages by the motions, skills, or tools required to open them, but ASTM states that classification is not an endorsement or approval of a package.
Under CPSC guidance for the Poison Prevention Packaging Act, “special packaging” means packaging designed to be significantly difficult for children under five to open within a reasonable time, while still not being difficult for adults to use properly. Final compliance should be confirmed by the brand, importer, or qualified testing body.
As usual, it will take 3 days for samples, and 10 days for mass production. But lead time depends on the packaging structure, dieline status, sample approval, material availability, printing method, finishing complexity, order quantity, and export requirements. A typical project includes specification review, dieline confirmation, sampling, artwork approval, mass production, quality inspection, packing, and shipping preparation.