Overview #
Magnetic closure rigid boxes carry a disproportionate share of a brand’s first-impression weight — the tactile experience of the lid, the flash of foil, the feel of the interior lining all communicate quality before the product is even seen. Getting the finishing specification wrong on these boxes is costly: soft-touch laminate applied over insufficiently cured UV coating delaminates within weeks, foil stamping on uncoated kraft wrapping paper requires 40–60% higher stamping pressure than on coated stock, and interior lining fabric that isn’t pre-shrunk will bubble and lift in humid shipping conditions. This guide covers the finishing decisions our structural and print engineering teams work through on every magnetic closure box project — from surface laminate selection to foil die parameters to lining substrate adhesion — so brand partners can brief us with confidence and avoid the specification gaps that cause sampling delays.
Surface Finishing: Soft-Touch Laminate, Gloss & Matte Options #
The outer wrap of a magnetic closure box is typically 128–157 gsm coated art paper or specialty paper, laminated to a 1.5–2.5mm greyboard shell. The surface finish applied to this wrap determines both the tactile register and the durability of the final box.
Soft-touch (velvet) laminate is our most-requested finish for premium cosmetics, spirits and electronics packaging. We apply it as a 28–32 micron BOPP film using a thermal lamination process at 80–95°C. The critical parameter is peel strength: we require a minimum 1.8 N/15mm bond (tested per ASTM F904) between the laminate and the printed substrate. Below this threshold, edge lifting appears within 30 days under normal retail handling. On dark or heavily inked coverage areas, we increase lamination temperature by 5–8°C to compensate for ink layer thickness.
One important constraint: soft-touch laminate is not compatible with direct foil stamping on the same surface panel. The micro-texture of the velvet film prevents the foil adhesive from achieving full contact. Our standard workaround is to apply foil stamping to the printed sheet before lamination, then laminate over the foil — this requires the foil to be rated for post-lamination and the lamination temperature to stay below 100°C to avoid foil oxidation.
Gloss and matte BOPP laminates run at 18–25 microns and are applied at 70–85°C. Gloss laminate increases surface reflectivity to 85–95 GU (gloss units, measured per ISO 2813), while matte laminate reduces it to 8–18 GU. Both are suitable for subsequent foil stamping and UV spot coating.
| Finish Type | Film Thickness | Lamination Temp | Foil Stamp Compatible | Typical Application |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Soft-Touch BOPP | 28–32 µm | 80–95°C | Pre-lam only | Luxury cosmetics, spirits, electronics |
| Gloss BOPP | 18–22 µm | 70–80°C | Yes (post-lam) | Consumer goods, retail gift boxes |
| Matte BOPP | 20–25 µm | 75–85°C | Yes (post-lam) | Skincare, premium food, candles |
| Soft-Touch PET | 30–36 µm | 85–100°C | Pre-lam only | High-durability export packaging |
| Aqueous Matte Coating | N/A (liquid) | Ambient cure | Yes | Eco-positioned brands, recyclable brief |
Foil Stamping Parameters for Magnetic Closure Box Wraps #
Hot foil stamping on rigid box wraps requires tighter process control than on folding cartons because the substrate is already laminated to board — there is no give in the material stack. We run foil stamping on a flatbed press at 90–130°C die temperature and 250–400 kg/cm² pressure, with dwell time of 0.3–0.8 seconds depending on foil type and substrate.
Gold and silver metallic foils (the most common requests) perform best on gloss or matte laminated surfaces. We specify Kurz or API foil grades rated for laminated substrates, with a minimum foil transfer rate of 98% on solid fill areas — any lower and pinholing is visible under retail lighting. For fine serif type below 8pt or line work below 0.3mm stroke width, we increase die temperature by 10–15°C and reduce pressure slightly to prevent foil bleed into counters.
Holographic foils require a separate calibration run. The embossed diffraction pattern in holographic foil is sensitive to pressure variation: over-pressure above 420 kg/cm² crushes the pattern and reduces the rainbow effect by 30–50%. We always run a 50-sheet pressure test before committing to a full production run on holographic jobs.
Registered foil stamping — where the foil area must align precisely with a printed element — is held to ±0.3mm register tolerance on our flatbed foil presses. For jobs requiring tighter alignment (e.g., foil within a printed border with less than 1mm clearance), we recommend designing the foil area with a minimum 0.5mm overlap into the printed zone to absorb register variation without creating a visible gap.
Die-cut foil stamping dies are machined from brass at 0.7–1.0mm relief depth for standard fills, and 0.4–0.6mm for fine detail work. Brass dies have a production life of approximately 50,000–80,000 impressions before edge wear becomes visible on fine detail.
Interior Lining: Fabric, Paper and Foam Substrate Selection #
The interior of a magnetic closure box is as important as the exterior for premium brands. We work with four primary lining categories: specialty paper, fabric (velvet, satin, suede), EVA foam, and flocked board.
Specialty paper linings (most common for cost-sensitive briefs) use 80–120 gsm uncoated or textured paper, adhered with water-based PVA adhesive. Adhesive coverage must be uniform at 15–20 g/m² — insufficient coverage causes corner lifting within 60 days; excess coverage bleeds through lightweight papers and creates surface staining.
Fabric linings — velvet and satin are the most requested — require pre-shrinking before cutting and application. Unshrunk fabric in a box that ships through temperature and humidity variation (e.g., sea freight from China to the US East Coast, where container humidity can reach 85% RH) will bubble and delaminate. We pre-shrink all fabric linings at 60°C for 20 minutes before cutting. Fabric is adhered using hot-melt adhesive at 140–160°C application temperature, with a bond strength target of ≥2.5 N/25mm (tested per ASTM D1876).
EVA foam inserts for product protection are specified at 15–30 kg/m³ density for lightweight products (under 500g) and 30–45 kg/m³ for heavier items. Foam thickness is typically 5–15mm depending on product fragility and box interior depth. For food-contact applications (e.g., chocolate or confectionery gift boxes), we use only FDA 21 CFR 177.2600-compliant foam grades.
Flocked board (velvet-effect board) is our recommended alternative to fabric lining for high-volume runs — it applies like paper but delivers a near-velvet tactile result at 30–40% lower cost. Flock fibre length is 0.5–1.0mm for standard applications; longer fibres (1.5–2.0mm) give a deeper pile effect but require 15–20% more adhesive coverage.
Specification Notes for Brand Partners #
When you brief us on a magnetic closure box finishing project, the three things we need first are: (1) the outer wrap paper specification or a reference sample, (2) the foil or laminate finish you’re targeting, and (3) whether the box interior will contact the product directly. That last point determines whether we need to apply food-contact or cosmetic-contact material standards to the lining substrate.
A common brief gap we see is brands specifying “soft-touch with gold foil” without flagging that the foil area is small and surrounded by soft-touch laminate — this combination requires pre-lamination foil stamping, which adds one production step and 3–5 working days to the sampling timeline. We flag this in our initial specification review so it doesn’t surprise you at the sample stage.
Our typical process: digital proof in 3–5 working days, physical sample in 12–18 working days (including foil die fabrication if required), production lead time 25–35 working days after sample approval. MOQ for magnetic closure boxes with custom finishing is typically 500 units, with 300-unit runs available for certain standard sizes.
Frequently Asked Questions #
Q1: What is the minimum foil stamping area that holds clean detail on a soft-touch laminated magnetic closure box?
A: On soft-touch laminated surfaces, foil stamping must be applied before lamination. For pre-lamination foil, we can hold clean detail on line work down to 0.3mm stroke width and type at 8pt and above, using a brass die at 0.4–0.6mm relief depth. Below these thresholds, foil bleed into fine counters becomes visible under normal lighting.
Q2: What is your MOQ and lead time for magnetic closure boxes with fabric interior lining?
A: Our standard MOQ for magnetic closure boxes with fabric lining (velvet or satin) is 500 units. Physical sampling takes 12–18 working days to allow for fabric pre-shrinking, lining adhesion testing, and foil die fabrication if required. Production lead time after sample approval is 25–35 working days depending on finishing complexity.
Q3: Do your interior lining materials comply with food-contact regulations for confectionery gift boxes?
A: Yes — for food-contact applications we specify EVA foam grades compliant with FDA 21 CFR 177.2600 and paper linings that meet EU Regulation 10/2011 migration limits for plastic materials in food contact. We provide material compliance declarations with each production order for food-contact configurations.
Q4: Can you combine matte laminate, spot UV and foil stamping on the same box exterior panel?
A: Yes, this is one of our most common premium finishing combinations. The sequence is: print → matte laminate → spot UV cure → foil stamp. Spot UV is applied at 80–120 mJ/cm² UV energy to achieve full cure before foil stamping. The foil die temperature is reduced to 90–100°C on UV-coated areas to prevent coating micro-cracking under the foil.
Q5: What causes interior fabric lining to bubble or delaminate after shipping, and how do you prevent it?
A: The primary cause is moisture absorption by unshrunk fabric during sea freight, where container humidity can reach 85% RH. We pre-shrink all fabric linings at 60°C for 20 minutes before cutting and application. We also target a hot-melt adhesive bond strength of ≥2.5 N/25mm (per ASTM D1876) — below this threshold, corner and edge lifting occurs within the first 30–60 days of retail handling.
Planning a packaging project? Contact our team to request a complimentary specification review and sample quote.
© 2026 Ukugi.com. All rights reserved.
Unauthorized reproduction or distribution is prohibited.