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Designing Folding Cartons for EPR – Practical Engineering Levers That Reduce Reporting Complexity

Designing Folding Cartons for EPR


Designing Folding Cartons for EPR

Practical Engineering Levers That Reduce Reporting Complexity

EPR packaging programs reward clarity and punish ambiguity. If your folding carton design creates hidden components,
inconsistent weights, or uncontrolled variants, your packaging material reporting requirements get harder,
and your exposure to eco-modulated fees rises. This guide explains how to engineer
design for EPR packaging so your folding carton recyclability design stays simple to report, easy to verify, and cheaper to administer.
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Updated for 2026 operating reality in North America and Europe. Sources include Sustainable Packaging Coalition and government EPR reporting guidance.
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This Article at a Glance

  • Design for EPR packaging starts with stable, component-level bills of materials and verified weights.
  • Folding carton recyclability design improves when windows, laminations, and inserts are minimized or tightly controlled.
  • Packaging material reporting requirements depend on weight-by-material discipline, not assumptions.
  • Reducing material variety and preventing spec drift lowers administrative burden and audit risk.
  • The most reliable way to reduce EPR fees packaging exposure is to simplify structure before it becomes a reporting exception.

If your carton architecture is controlled, your reporting becomes predictable.

What EPR Changes for Folding Cartons

EPR shifts packaging decisions into reporting discipline. Your folding carton is no longer “paperboard packaging.”
It is a set of components, weights, and classifications that must stay stable across SKUs, plants, and suppliers.

Most EPR programs require obligated companies to join a producer responsibility organization, report packaging data, and pay fees that scale with the packaging they supply into market.
When fees are eco-modulated, recyclability and design choices can increase or decrease what you pay.
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For compliance teams, packaging material reporting requirements are fundamentally weight and material based. Government reporting guidance is explicit: report the weight of individual materials, and treat multi-material and composite structures as a classification problem that must be consistently applied.
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That is why folding carton recyclability design is also a data design problem.
The easiest way to reduce EPR fees packaging exposure is to remove avoidable complexity before it becomes a reporting exception you manage forever.
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Define the objective: fewer exceptions, cleaner reporting

If your packaging program has thousands of SKUs, EPR does not fail because you lack good intent.
It fails because small packaging changes accumulate. Windows change, coatings change, weights drift, vendors substitute.
Over time, you lose a defensible packaging bill of materials, and your reports become estimates.

The engineering goal is clear. Use design for EPR packaging to keep carton structures classifiable, separable, and measurable.
This is the fastest path to lower administrative burden and better fee forecasting.


Practical Engineering Levers for EPR-Ready Folding Cartons

These are the carton design variables that most often create reporting exceptions. Fix them at the structural level,
and your packaging material reporting requirements become repeatable.

EPR reporting is simplest when a folding carton is predominantly fiber and the non-fiber elements are either minimal, separable, or consistently specified.
Design-for-recycling guidance for paper and paperboard highlights the same theme across markets, reduce problematic combinations, limit non-paper components, and avoid structures that break pulping or screening performance.
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If your goal is to reduce EPR fees packaging exposure, the same levers also influence eco-modulated fee outcomes where recyclability and material choices are scored or priced differently.
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Lever 1: Windows

Windowed cartons: design for separation and documentation

A plastic window turns “paperboard packaging” into a multi-component structure. That is not automatically non-compliant.
It becomes a reporting problem when the window film and adhesive are not tracked as explicit components.

  • Keep windows as small as performance allows.
  • Prefer designs where the window is removable or clearly separable at end-of-life.
  • Specify film type, gauge, and adhesive in the packaging bill of materials.

Composite classification rules and thresholds vary by jurisdiction. Government reporting guidance shows how small plastic fractions can change how fiber-based packs are classified and reported.
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Lever 2: Laminations

Lamination control: avoid permanent multi-layer stacks

Laminations and barrier films can degrade fiber recoverability and create “what exactly is this” reporting debates.
Paper recyclability guidance flags certain coatings and laminated structures as conditional or limited compatibility,
depending on composition and local processing capability.
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  • Use coatings aligned with fiber recovery where barrier performance allows.
  • If a laminate is required, lock material spec and thickness, then treat it as a permanent reportable component.
  • Avoid unannounced vendor substitutions, especially for “equivalent” films.

The reporting risk is often not the laminate itself, it is uncontrolled variation across SKUs and suppliers.

Lever 3: Material variety

Reduce component count and material variety

Every extra material, insert, liner, or coating increases classification work and verification time.
Design guidance for paper and paperboard emphasizes limiting non-paper components that can disrupt recycling operations.
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  • Eliminate rigid inserts where paperboard engineering can replace them.
  • Standardize board grades across size families.
  • Keep adhesives and coatings consistent across the platform.
Lever 4: Weight

Lightweight without creating fragility exceptions

Fee calculations often scale with reported weight. Even when a program does not publish fee mechanics publicly, internal cost allocation usually tracks mass by material.
Lightweighting is only useful if it is controlled and documented, otherwise weights drift and reporting credibility falls.

  • Right-size cartons to reduce void and unnecessary board area.
  • Optimize caliper based on compression and distribution needs.
  • Use consistent conversion specs so weights stay stable over time.

EPR guidance consistently frames reporting as weight-by-material discipline, not estimates.
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Lever 5: Eco-modulation

Engineer toward lower-fee outcomes where eco-modulation applies

Eco-modulation adjusts producer fees based on packaging attributes such as recyclability and other performance factors.
That means design decisions can change your fee position, not just your sustainability narrative.
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  • Prefer fiber-forward solutions with minimal non-fiber add-ons.
  • Document rationale for any non-fiber component that remains.
  • Keep the platform stable so performance claims and reporting stay defensible.

Quick diagnostic: where reporting breaks first

  • “Same carton” across SKUs, but different calipers, coatings, or windows.
  • A barrier film is added for shelf life, but the BOM and weights never update.
  • Artwork teams approve a new finish, and compliance never sees it.
  • Multiple suppliers produce “equivalent” cartons with different materials.

The fix is not a spreadsheet heroics cycle. The fix is controlled carton engineering and controlled data.


Data Structure and Audit Readiness for EPR Packaging

EPR compliance work accelerates when packaging data is SKU-based, component-based, and version-controlled.
That is how you turn folding carton packaging into report-ready material supply data.

Most EPR regimes converge on the same operational requirement, report packaging by material and weight, then maintain evidence that supports what you submitted.
Government guidance is explicit about weight-by-material reporting and how to treat composite and multi-material packaging in submissions.
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In the United States, EPR packaging programs are moving from concept into compliance cycles across multiple states. That increases multi-jurisdiction complexity and raises the value of a single packaging system of record.
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Build a packaging bill of materials that matches reality

Treat each folding carton as a component structure, paperboard, coatings, window film, adhesives, inserts.
The BOM should reflect what is physically supplied, not what the template spec says.
EPR reporting guidance repeatedly ties compliance to material and weight discipline.
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Outcome: fewer classification debates and fewer “unknown material” exceptions.

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Store weights at the component level, then roll up

If a carton has a window, you need the paperboard weight and the window weight.
Some EPR guidance examples show this pattern across materials, each material weight rolls into its category for reporting.
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Outcome: better fee modeling and cleaner verification support.

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Apply change control to packaging, like you would to a formula

When a coating, laminate, board grade, or window film changes, your EPR reporting should update with it.
Multi-state and multi-market timelines make “silent packaging drift” more expensive to correct later.
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Outcome: defensible audit trails and fewer retroactive data fixes.

Lower reporting complexity

Controlled carton platform

  • Fewer board grades across the range
  • Coatings standardized by category
  • Window use limited and consistently specified
  • Weights verified and version-controlled

This structure makes design for EPR packaging operational. Your folding carton recyclability design stays stable,
and your packaging material reporting requirements become repeatable.

Higher reporting complexity

Exception-driven carton portfolio

  • Multiple finishes chosen SKU by SKU with no governance
  • Window films substituted by vendor availability
  • Weights guessed or copied from legacy specs
  • No linkage between artwork approvals and BOM updates

This is where teams lose audit readiness, and where fee exposure becomes unpredictable when eco-modulation applies.
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Where Netpak fits: engineering plus documentation

Netpak manufactures custom folding cartons and windowed boxes, and supports structural design, prepress, printing, finishing, and logistics.
That matters for EPR because a controlled packaging supplier can keep structures stable and documentation consistent across runs and variants.
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  • Structure and prepress discipline: CAD, prototyping, and dieline control to reduce uncontrolled variation.9
  • Material transparency: board selection, windowing options, coatings, and finishing captured in specs.8
  • Quote inputs that match reporting needs: cartons priced around specs, volumes, and timelines, with clear material and finishing definitions that support internal reporting workflows.9

If your goal is to reduce EPR fees packaging exposure and reporting labor, start by stabilizing carton architecture and packaging data in the same project.



Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions from packaging engineers and compliance leaders aligning folding carton programs with EPR reporting.

What does EPR reporting require for folding cartons?

EPR programs generally require producers to report packaging supplied by material category and weight. That creates a downstream need for
SKU-level bills of materials, controlled component weights, and documented material classifications. Ontario’s Blue Box program, for example,
requires producers to register and report supply data by defined material categories.
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For folding cartons, reporting failures usually come from undocumented windows, laminations, coating changes, or outdated weight assumptions.

Do windows and laminations affect recyclability reporting?

They can. Recyclability guidance for paper packaging cautions against composite structures that are difficult to separate in fiber recovery systems.
Even when a carton is predominantly paperboard, window films, barrier layers, and laminations often require explicit tracking and classification
within your packaging material reporting requirements.
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How do you reduce EPR fees through folding carton design?

While fee structures differ by jurisdiction, common levers include reducing total material weight supplied, improving recyclability alignment,
and simplifying multi-material structures. EPR resources consistently link packaging reduction and recyclability improvements to lower cost exposure.
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Practically, that means fiber-forward design, minimized non-fiber components, standardized board grades, and verified component weights.

What does “audit ready” packaging data look like?

Audit-ready packaging data is version-controlled, traceable to specifications, and aligned to what is physically supplied.
It includes a SKU-linked bill of materials, documented material categories, and current component weights. Supply reporting guidance emphasizes
weight-by-material discipline, which increases the importance of packaging data governance.
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Request an EPR-Ready Folding Carton Quote

If you are redesigning folding cartons to reduce reporting complexity, send Netpak your dielines,
board grades, finishing specifications, window details, and annual volumes by SKU.
We will respond with structured engineering options that support clean packaging material reporting requirements and audit readiness.


Request a Quote

Prefer email, send SKU specs and timelines to
sales@netpak.com.


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Interactive Packaging 2025

Interactive Packaging 2025

Five QR-code strategies Canadian brands use to turn one-time buyers into loyal repeat customers.

Why QR-Enabled Cartons Now?

Canadian consumer packaged-goods brands face a crowded shelf and a distracted shopper. Smart, QR-enabled packaging converts that fleeting scan to a second sale. Global QR-code scans climbed 57 % last year and are on track for another 22 % jump by the end of 20251. The interactive packaging market already tops USD 5.2 billion and is compounding at nearly 7 % annually2. Below are the five use-cases delivering the highest repeat-purchase lift for Canadian brands, plus the production moves Netpak uses to execute them at scale.

5 High-Impact Use Cases

1. Instant Re-Order Links

A single scan pushes shoppers straight to a pre-filled cart or subscription page.

Connected-packaging studies show that QR-enabled “buy again” flows lift second-purchase rates by up to 25 %3.

Production note

Netpak’s lithographic presses print razor-sharp 2 mm² codes on board up to 40 pt & F-flute; even travel-size cartons stay scannable.

2. Loyalty-Linked Receipts

Lead consumers into your loyalty app, auto-deposit points, & invite them back with a timed coupon.

Uniqode’s 2025 survey ranks loyalty integration as the top QR feature driving re-engagement5.

Production note

Our pre-press team embeds serialized, variable-data QR codes without slowing press, keeping each carton unique and traceable.

3. Transparency & Traceability

Canadian consumers increasingly expect transparency on origin, sourcing, and expiry. By 2025, all pharmaceutical packaging must feature a GS1 2D barcode.

Food brands that adopt the same standard strengthen trust & loyalty7.

Production note

We embed GS1 Digital Link syntax into QR artwork, allowing one code to satisfy point-of-sale & consumer-engagement requirements.

4. Bite-Size Tutorials & Recipes

Explorer Research reports that tutorial QR codes now appear on 20% of new Canadian food launches, giving shoppers immediate access to video prep guides & upsell recipes8.

Brands see higher satisfaction & repeat purchases.

Production note

Our gloss UV or soft-touch varnishes frame the code & keep it from smudging, preserving scan accuracy through the product’s life cycle.

5. Location-Adaptive Campaigns

A dynamic QR detects device language, GPS region, or OS, then redirects accordingly.

A Canadian soft-drink brand boosted conversion by routing French & English consumers to localized content from one QR9. Geofenced offers & limited drops turn first buyers into insiders.

Production note

Variable QR codes are merged on press with Netpak’s color-accurate cartons, so campaign tweaks happen in software, not costly plate changes.

Why Netpak?

Canadian manufacturing,
North American reach

We print and convert folding cartons in Montréal for food, beverage, health-and-beauty, retail, and pharmaceutical leaders at Netpak.

Full-stack service

Structural design, pre-press, enhanced printing effects, finishing, and coast-to-coast warehousing under one roof mean faster speed-to-shelf.

Certified sustainability

FSC®, PEFC™, and BRCGS Grade A certifications keep your ESG promises credible.

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Eco-Ink vs Soy Ink: 2025 Cost-Benefit Analysis for Canadian Folding-Carton Printers

Eco-Ink vs Soy Ink: 2025 Cost-Benefit Analysis for Canadian Folding-Carton Printers

How water-based and algae eco-inks stack up against soy ink on cost, compliance, and brand impact — and where Netpak’s Montréal plant fits in.

Market Snapshot

  • Algae ink is scaling. A recent market study projects a 17.6% CAGR (2025–2031) for algae inks1.
  • Soy ink remains the volume leader in North America, valued for renewability and colour performance2, 12.
  • Interest in “eco-ink” is rising as Canada’s VOC limits phase in (most categories Jan 1, 2024; disinfectants Jan 1, 2025)10.
  • Global folding-carton value was ~USD 178 B in 2024 with growth tracking ~4.5% CAGR toward 203311.

Raw-Ink Economics (Q3 2025)

FactorEco-Ink (Water + Algae)Soy Ink
Street price (black, UV offset)Algae ink “from USD 37.48 per 0.5 kg jar”3Typically +2–5% vs petroleum inks4
Typical yield on SBS boardComparable to conventional systemsOften cited to cover ~15% more area vs petroleum14
VOC profileWater-based & certain algae systems are very low-VOC; UV Offset ALGAE INK lists <0.1% VOC13Lower VOCs than petroleum inks overall19
Carbon profileLiving Ink’s pigment marketed as carbon-negative13Renewable feedstock; markedly lower VOC emissions vs petroleum19

Pressroom Cost Drivers

  • Cleanup & downtime: Water-based systems clean with alkaline water + mild detergent, reducing solvent purchases and change-over time7.
  • Regulatory avoidance: Low/zero-VOC inks sidestep Canada’s new concentration limits and related compliance burdens10.
  • Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR): Phase-in of the Federal Plastics Registry means brands must report plastic placed on the market starting Sept 2025; compatible inks support recyclability claims and reporting9.

Performance & Brand Impact

Print Quality

Independent studies show soy-based packaging inks can achieve very low colour differences (ΔE ≈ 1) without compromising rub, gloss, or adhesion5, 5b. Algae-based black is positioned as a drop-in replacement for carbon black pigments13.

Shelf Appeal

Brands continue to specify soy and UV systems for sharp, vibrant colour on premium cartons12.

ESG Storytelling

Keywords like “algae ink” and “eco-ink Canada” resonate in D2C food & beauty, giving converters a marketing edge.

ROI Model: 50 MM Sheet/Year Carton Line

Cost / BenefitEco-Ink (Water + Algae)Soy Ink
Ink spend delta vs solvent+0 % (water), +12 % (algae)+3 %
Solvent & VOC permit savings– CAD 0.04 per sheet– CAD 0.02 per sheet
Cleanup labour– 25 %– 15 %
Marketing upliftHigh for algae SKU pilotsModerate
Net annual impact*– CAD 118 k– CAD 71 k

*Assumes Montréal electricity rate, one eight-colour press. Solvent baseline: petroleum ink, 2023 prices.

Where Netpak Fits

Compliance-Ready Systems

Netpak runs odourless water-based inks at its BRCGS-certified Montréal facility and offers rapid press trials for soy or algae ink.
Explore services · BRCGS announcement

Verified Chain-of-Custody

PEFC™ and FSC® chain-of-custody programs available for responsible fibre sourcing8.

Lean Manufacturing

Makeready waste under 2 % keeps costs tight while supporting your sustainability targets.

Conclusion

Why Ink Choice Matters in 2025

• VOC rules raise compliance risk and cost.
• Brand teams want lower-carbon, high-fidelity colour on SBS.
• Pressroom efficiency depends on cleanup time and consumables.

Financial Takeaways

• Water-based inks can hit cost parity, with solvent and permit savings.
• Algae inks may carry a premium, offset by ESG and carbon-negative positioning.
• Soy delivers proven coverage and colour stability for high-volume runs.

How to Decide for Your SKU

• Compare yield, ΔE, and cleanup minutes on your board grade.
• Model VOC exposure and reporting under Canadian rules.
• Request a comparative press evaluation to confirm per-carton cost and LCA.

Need help scoping a trial or cost model? Contact Netpak.

See the Numbers on Your Own SKU

Email sales@netpak.com
or call +1 514-333-4585 and reference “Eco-Ink Audit.”


Request Your Ink Cost Audit

FAQ

Do I need new anilox rolls for algae ink?
No. Viscosity is comparable to low-VOC water-based systems; existing anilox volumes typically work.

Will soy ink slow my die-cutter?
Dry-back can be slower on gloss stocks. Schedule an IR/UV booster, or choose uncoated kraft liners.

Does eco-ink meet CFIA food-contact rules?
Netpak’s water-based and soy systems carry FDA/Health Canada compliance letters. Algae ink is under review; pilot batches ship with migration test certificates.

What if my brand wants carbon-negative claims?
Use algae pigment; Living Ink markets a carbon-negative black pigment13.

References
  1. Research and Markets. Algae Ink Market Size, Competitors, Trends & Forecast (2025–2031) — CAGR 17.6%.
  2. PackMojo. “Vegetable-Based Inks: Petroleum Alternatives.” Updated 2024.
  3. Living Ink Technologies. “Shop the ALGAE INK™ Collection” — UV Offset from USD 37.48 (0.5 kg).
  4. Popular Science. “Should we switch from petroleum ink to soy-based ink?” 2022. (Notes soy cost premium ~2–5%).
  5. Printing United / TAGA Abstract (2019). Water-based soy polymers in packaging inks — ΔE results < 1.0.  |  WMU Thesis (2018): Soy-based flexo ink colour difference (ΔE) findings.
  6. Smithers. The Future of Water-Based vs Solvent Printing to 2027 — growth outlook.
  7. Miraclon. “Ink management for improved plate performance.” (Cleaning guidelines for water-based vs solvent/UV).
  8. Netpak. “Getting to the core of Netpak’s sustainability certifications.” (FSC®, PEFC™ background).
  9. Environment & Climate Change Canada. “Federal Plastics Registry” — reporting starts Sept 2025.
  10. ECCC. “VOC Concentration Limits for Certain Products Regulations” — key dates (Jan 1 2024; Jan 1 2025 for disinfectants).
  11. Straits Research. Folding Carton Packaging Market — 2024 value & ~4.5% CAGR to 2033.
  12. Meyers Printing. “Soy Ink vs UV Ink: Pros & Cons for Packaging & Printing.” 2024.
  13. Living Ink. “ALGAE INK™” — carbon-negative pigment & drop-in positioning; UV Offset ALGAE INK page lists <0.1% VOC.  |  Product page.
  14. US EPA (NEPIS). “Waste Reduction Evaluation of Soy-Based Ink at a Sheet-Fed Offset Printer” — soy inks spread ~15% further.
  15. US EPA Project Summary. Volatile components: soy vs petroleum inks (soy ~0.8% vs petroleum ~4.6%).

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Netpak Packaging: Over $ 2 million Investments in Production Plant

Always on the lookout for the most innovative practices to support the company’s ambitious growth plans, Netpak Packaging has introduced new automated technology and increased its production capacity at its Montreal plant by over 30% in the finishing department through an investment of more than $ 2 million.

“Netpak has remained operational as an essential business and at full capacity throughout the pandemic to serve our strategic partners,” says Carlo Cammalleri, Neptak’s Co-founder. “Throughout the current circumstances surrounding COVID-19, our incredible dedicated employees have stepped up their efforts. It is thanks to them that we are able to make a series of investments and continue to surpass our objectives year after year.”

In line with the company’s core values of excellence and ongoing commitment to innovation, automation and technology, Netpak has added two important pieces of equipment to its production facility : a MasterFold A2 1110 folder-gluer equipped with a SpeedWave module, as well as a Bobst Spanthera 106LER diecutter, fully integrated with our ERP, MRP and WMS.

“The competition in the printing and packaging industry is the fiercest it has ever been. What sets Netpak apart from competitors is our speed-to-market capabilities, efficient production times, information system and traceability. By investing in new equipment, this has allowed Netpak to remain a leader in the folding carton industry and take folding carton to a new advanced technological level,” confirms Salvatore Novello, Netpak’s Co-founder

The MasterFold A2 1110 offers three important properties: round-the-clock speed, automated technology, efficiency, remarkable versatility and exceptional quality of its straight line boxes. This enables non-stop production at increased speeds, as well as a high degree of automation. In addition to its efficiency, the MasterFold is equipped with a SpeedWave module that has allowed Netpak to save a tremendous amount of make-ready or changeover times when needing to set up the machine for other styles of boxes. The addition of this machine has allowed a production capacity increase in the final stages of production, increasingly for hymes bottom style boxes, where the speed is more than doubled. The machine is fully connected and integrated with our ERP and HRP with the most advanced intelligent IMS for more efficient performance and make-ready times.

The company will also be adding the Cartonpack module, an automatic packer, to its machinery portfolio. Featuring an integrated sampler for quality checks without stopping production, this automated line integrates to the MasterFold and automatically fills the shipping boxes with folded and glued cartons to substantially increase the productivity of the folder-gluer line.
The Bobst SPanthera 106LER diecutter offers unparalleled flexibility, precision, ergonomics and profitability. This versatile and powerful diecutter offers cutting, stripping and blanking in one pass at high speeds. Since its installation and integration in the plant, it has allowed Netpak to stay ahead of the competition thanks to its remarkable productivity, simplified operation and superior quality cutting. Offering a high level of automation, the Bobst SPanthera is also fully integrated with our ERP and HRP leading to the most efficient performance and make-ready times.

Netpak: Printed Folding Carton Experts. Contact us today for a quote: sales@netpak.com | CANADA – USA 1-866-399-8544

The road to plastic-free packaging

As we move into the new decade, one of the most prominent conversations we are having is that of sustainability. Businesses are becoming more conscious of the environment on many levels, especially when it comes to packaging. But how can they produce ethical and eco-friendly packaging while keeping costs under control? We will examine some perfectly attainable options available that can reduce the use of plastic and be cost efficient. Don’t despair, you can save a few bucks while also saving a few ducks!

Plastic rose to prominence as a sturdier alternative to glass in the latter half of the 20th century. Its lightweight composition and resistance to breaking when dropped allowed it to become one of the most common packaging materials for a plethora of industries. However, plastic also has its disadvantages, as it doesn’t biodegrade quickly and eventually clogs landfills, oceans and animal habitats. Companies worldwide are moving to more sustainable packaging, such as paper, sugar-cane, and other alternatives.

Convert to paperboard packaging

Just to refresh your memory, paperboard is a thick paper-based material. This makes it ideal for protecting your products as it’s readily available in various thicknesses. However, for the purpose of this conversation, its most important feature is its biodegradability. Known to degrade quicker than plastic, it’s also a cost-effective option for your packaging.

Our team of procurement experts at Netpak can help source paperboards at an effective cost that fit right into your packaging standards, including recyclable boards. Learn more about the paperboards offered here.

Use biomaterials

We’ve all heard the expression “you are what you eat”. But did you ever think that what you eat can also be used as packaging material? Plant- and food-based materials are making headlines as cheap and degradable substitutes to plastic packaging. Some of the ones that are growing in popularity include sugarcane boards or boards made of tapioca root and cornstarch.

It doesn’t have to be a gruelling process to find an alternative to plastic-free packaging. It’s a small step for a business, but a giant leap for the environment. So, get on board with paperboard!

Netpak : Experts en boîtes pliantes imprimées. Obtenez un devis : sales@netpak.com | CANADA – ÉTATS-UNIS 1-866-399-8544

Ink-credible options for designing your packaging

When designing the packaging for your product, there are many aspects that need to be considered. One of the main attributes that would make your product stand out is color. But there are different ways to use them. How do we narrow it down? Depending on how you want to brand your product, you have several specialty ink alternatives to choose from to take your packaging to the next level.

Shine bright with metallics

If you’re looking to make an impression with your design, it might take more than your ordinary color palette to do so. Adding a little bling with metallics can do the trick. Metallic inks contain reflective metal particles such as copper or bronze. When the ink dries, the light hits those particles in a way that creates a lustrous sheen to the material. The most common metallics that are used are silver and gold, and you can imagine why. This specialty ink gives a high-end and luxurious finish to your product. It also can be a great substitute for foil stamping because of its cost efficiency. Venture into new design territories and let your creativity take over with this type of ink.

Fluorescents is the new black

When you think vibrancy, you think bold colors. Fluorescents don’t have to be only for highlighters. If you are looking to make a statement and make your packaging pop, consider this fabulous palette of color. Fluorescent ink is made from pigments that absorb ultraviolet energy and release it within the perceptible spectrum. Therefore, it’s highly recommended that these vibrant colors be printed on a black or white background to really have them reach their full colorful potential. To really ensure a pop of color, a double layer of this ink is suggested. So out with the dull colors, in with the bold and the beautiful!

Softness and elegance with pastels

Sometimes simplicity can go a long way. Subtle and delicate colors can reflect a message of calmness and ease. Many companies are opting for this approach when designing their packaging. Pastel colors have made a resurgence with their softer tones such as baby blue, peach, and light mint. It might be slightly trickier to achieve these hues with the standard color palette, but more and more cosmetic brands are choosing this specialty ink option for their packaging. This now trendsetting pantone of colors has become the next fashionable thing, after glitter and unicorns!

No matter what path you take when it comes to choosing your ink, know that there’s a strategy that should be kept in mind. Different colors can make you feel different things as there is a psychology behind every hue (read more about the psychology of colors here). Therefore, choosing what fits best for your brand is crucial. Netpak’s team can help you narrow it down. With their variety of enhanced printing options, such as the metallic inks mentioned above, we are certified to help make your packaging simply ink-credible.

Netpak: Printed Folding Carton Experts. Contact us today for a quote: sales@netpak.com | CANADA – USA 1-866-399-8544

How to choose the right coating or lamination for your packaging

The folding carton and printing industry is flooded with coating and lamination options. These print coatings can help your packaging stand out from its competition by providing a unique texture, making them more durable and elegant. There are many different options available today ranging from standard to speciality finishes that can be applied to the full packaging or to selected spots. Our team of industry experts will help you select the best type of lamination or coating available for your project.

Lamination

This is the ideal finish for paperboard boxes, although it can be costly compared to other options because of its protective properties, such as moisture protection. If your product has to stay in storage for some time, lamination could be the way to go for your packaging finish.

There are various types of laminations available at Netpak, including the three most popular: gloss, matte and soft touch lamination. The most common gloss lamination offers a clear and lustrous finish to enhance the look of your packaging and intensifies its color. Matte lamination, often chosen over gloss in luxury products, offers a minimalist and elegant look, while soft touch offers all the benefits of matte lamination while giving your packaging a velvety, brushed-hand feel. Learn more about the different types of laminations Netpak offers here.

Aqueous (AQ) Coating

Commonly used as a cost-effective solution, AQ coating is used to protect printed pieces by providing a gloss or matter surface that deters dirt and fingerprints. AQ coating is water-based and food safe, making it the ideal sustainable solution for the food and beverage industry. Netpak’s team of experts is well-versed in the rules and regulations of the food and beverage industry, allowing us to suggest and provide the most cost-effective and best-suited solutions for your packaging. Learn more about Netpak’s highly-coveted certifications here.

Ultraviolet (UV) Coating

Ultraviolet coatings, commonly called UV coating, provides a glossy finish that is often compared to a gloss lamination. Though similar and eco-friendlier, UV coating is not as strong and does not protect your packaging as lamination would. UV is a cost-effective solution and quick to produce if you’re on a budget and in a time crunch.

Varnish & No-Coating

Varnishes can be another option for smaller budgets. It is basically a clear ink available in gloss, satin or matte. Digital printing is great for efficiency, fast turnarounds and lower per unit cost. Meanwhile, when the packaging is mostly used for shipping and transportation, embellishments and expensive coating are typically not required, which results in no coating.

Netpak: Printed Folding Carton Experts. Contact us today for a quote: sales@netpak.com | CANADA – USA 1-866-399-8544

 

The Pantone Color Matching System (PMS) and its Use in Printing

The Pantone Matching System (PMS) is a standardized color language and design system that allows for color matching and is run by Pantone Inc. The goal of the PMS matching system is to make the color language universal for printers and many other industries. It ensures color standardization and is coded through a numbering system, also known as Pantone numbers This system is widely used because of it’s high level of correctness in color identification, quality control, and meticulous design specifications.

Pantone defines what the color is supposed to look like, whether the color is the right shade of magenta, cyan, red, or yellow, etc. As Pantone is the most widely used color system in the world, it does offer great benefits in getting the finished result just right, rather than having to go through trial-and-error.

There are various PMS Palettes available, including the Pantone Solid, Process, Textile and Plastic palettes. These different palettes are industry specific, although the Pantone Solid Color palette is the most widely produced color palette by Pantone.

What if your colors are in CMYK? A conversion from CMYK to Pantone can be made, as well as vice-versa. Pantone does also offer a wider range of colors that CMYK might not be able to achieve.

As a printing and packaging leader, Netpak is proud to demonstrate the highest levels of reliability, quality and consistency associated to their production. In addition to color matching correctness, Netpak is also GMI certified. This designation underscores Netpak’s ability to adhere to consistent and repeatable colour reproduction standards and techniques that meet all the customers’ coloration requirements. Learn more about our various certifications and how Netpak continues to be a folding carton industry leader here.

Netpak: Printed Folding Carton Experts. Contact us today for a quote: sales@netpak.com | CANADA – USA 1-866-399-8544

Soft-Touch Coating vs Soft-Touch Lamination

It’s no secret that branding is paramount in today’s business world, and the image you project to the world is key. Consumer packaging companies emphasize visual, tactile and various other sensory elements in their packaging design to maximize allure and ensure a strong engagement between brand and consumer. The finish you choose for your folding carton packaging can make it that much more unique.

A soft-touch finish has become popular in the printing and packaging industry and taken the lead over other types of finishes, as it improves the exterior appearance of your carton. This finish, when applied, creates a velvety texture that is “soft” to the touch.

Industries, especial in retail and luxury, use this option as it offers a drastic impact on quality and perceived value of the final product. However, there are variations between a soft-touch coating and soft-touch lamination. Read on below to learn more about the two options.

Soft-touch Coating

Soft-touch coating is achieved in-line during the printing process and offers quick drying times. This type of coating will not alter the coloration or quality of your finished product. It is the more-cost effective alternative to the soft-touch lamination. It is a great option for clients seeking a soft look and feel that is fingerprint resistant, all while being resistant to yellowing and offering different options in surface thickness.

Netpak and its team of experts are where you can find the best options for your product to stand out on the market. Learn more about our enhanced printing options, including the soft-touch lamination and coating. Our team will guide you in selecting the ideal finish for your product, while taking into account your final budget.

Soft-touch Lamination

The soft-touch lamination process uses a laminate plastic film that is bonded on top of the printed paperboard. While creating a barrier that is fingerprint resistant, this type of coating will generally mute and add a level of sophistication to darker colors with a fingerprint resistant finish. A laminate is costlier than the coating option; however, it provides added durability and strength to your packaging, whereas the coating does not.

Soft-touch lamination is more resistant to scuffs and scratches, which makes it useful in shipping. It will provide you with a softer look and is resistant to fingerprints smudges and changes in colors over time, which is helpful if your product is meant to be kept in storage for a period of time.

Netpak: Printed Folding Carton Experts. Contact us today for a quote: sales@netpak.com | CANADA – USA 1-866-399-8544