Overview #
Colour cosmetics packaging sits at the intersection of precision engineering and brand expression — tolerances that are acceptable on a shipping carton will fail on a lipstick sleeve or eyeshadow palette box. The brands we work with in this category range from indie beauty labels launching their first pressed-powder compact to established skincare lines refreshing their secondary packaging across 50+ SKUs. What they share is a zero-tolerance expectation for colour accuracy, surface finish consistency, and structural integrity at the point of sale. This guide walks through our production process from substrate selection to final QC release, with the specific parameters our team uses at each stage.
Substrate Selection and Board Specification #
The first decision we make when a colour cosmetics brief lands on our desk is substrate — and it drives every downstream process choice. For folding carton secondary packaging (mascara, foundation, serum boxes), we typically specify 300–350 GSM SBS (Solid Bleached Sulphate) board. SBS gives us the clean white base essential for accurate colour reproduction, and its calendered surface holds fine halftone dots without dot gain exceeding 12% on our sheet-fed offset lines.
For rigid boxes — palettes, gift sets, premium skincare compacts — we use 1.5–2.0mm greyboard wrapped with 128–157 GSM coated art paper. Below 1.5mm, the lid panel on a magnetic closure palette flexes under repeated open-close cycles and the hinge crease shows stress whitening within 30–50 cycles in our durability testing. Above 2.0mm, the box corners become difficult to wrap cleanly without fibre tear at the turn-in edge.
For any packaging with direct or indirect cosmetic product contact, we source board certified to FDA 21 CFR 176.170 (indirect food and cosmetic contact) and EU Regulation 10/2011 where EU market distribution is required. FSC-certified board is available across all our standard grades with no MOQ premium.
| Packaging Type | Board Specification | Surface Treatment |
|---|---|---|
| Folding carton (secondary) | 300–350 GSM SBS | Calendered, C1S or C2S |
| Rigid box wrap paper | 128–157 GSM coated art | Gloss or matte lamination |
| Rigid box core | 1.5–2.0mm greyboard | N/A (internal) |
| Drawer/slide box | 350–400 GSM duplex | C1S, grey back |
| Specialty paper wrap | 80–120 GSM uncoated | Embossed or textured |
Print Process Parameters and Colour Control #
Colour cosmetics packaging is where print accuracy matters most. A foundation brand’s nude-tone palette box printed 5ΔE off-target looks wrong next to the product inside — and we’ve seen brands reject full production runs for exactly that reason. Our standard for this category is ΔE ≤ 1.5 against approved colour target, measured with a spectrophotometer under D50 illuminant per ISO 13655.
We run sheet-fed offset (Heidelberg CX 102) for folding carton runs above 5,000 units, with inline colour measurement every 500 sheets. For shorter runs (500–3,000 units) or jobs requiring metallic or fluorescent inks, we use UV offset, which gives us better ink laydown on heavily coated stocks and eliminates the 24-hour drying hold required for conventional offset before lamination.
Pantone Matching System (PMS) is our default for brand colour specification. When a brand partner provides only RGB or CMYK values without a PMS reference, we build a G7-calibrated ICC profile and run a press proof before committing to production. This adds 2–3 working days but prevents the colour drift that causes rejection at goods receipt.
For hot stamping — common on premium skincare and fragrance secondary packaging — we specify foil dwell time at 0.08–0.12 seconds and die temperature at 90–110°C for standard metallic foils on coated stock. Outside these ranges, either the foil adhesion fails (cold) or the substrate shows heat distortion and gloss hazing (hot).
Surface Finishing and Structural Assembly #
Surface finishing is where colour cosmetics packaging earns its shelf presence. The most common combination we run for this category is matte lamination + spot UV — the contrast between the flat matte field and the gloss UV highlights creates the tactile premium feel that beauty brands rely on. We apply BOPP matte lamination at 3–5 microns adhesive coat weight; below 3 microns we see delamination at the score lines after die-cutting.
Soft-touch lamination (polyurethane-coated BOPP) is increasingly specified for skincare secondary packaging. It performs well but requires a 48-hour cure hold after lamination before die-cutting — if we rush this step, the soft-touch coating micro-tears at the crease and the tactile effect is lost on the finished box. We build this hold into our standard schedule for all soft-touch jobs.
For structural assembly of rigid boxes, our tolerance on wrap paper alignment is ±0.5mm at the corner turn-in. Beyond that, the wrap paper overlap becomes visible on the finished box edge. We use semi-automatic wrapping machines with vision-guided paper placement for all rigid box production runs above 1,000 units.
Quality control at the finishing stage follows AQL 2.5 (ISO 2859-1) for visual defects — this is our standard for colour cosmetics packaging. For structural defects (delamination, crease cracking, magnet pull-force below 800g on magnetic closure boxes), we apply 100% inspection on the first 500 units of any new tooling run.
Specification Notes for Brand Partners #
When you brief us on colour cosmetics packaging, the three things we need immediately are: (1) the exact Pantone references or physical colour standard for all brand colours, (2) the product dimensions and weight for structural sizing, and (3) the target market — EU, US, and ASEAN markets each carry different compliance requirements for board certification and ink systems.
The most common brief mistake we see is brands providing only digital mockups without specifying finish. “Matte with shiny logo” describes dozens of different finish combinations — matte lamination + spot UV, soft-touch + foil stamp, aqueous matte coating + gloss flood UV — and each has different cost, lead time, and tactile outcome. We’ll always ask you to clarify before sampling.
Our standard sampling process for colour cosmetics folding cartons: digital colour proof in 3–5 working days, physical pre-production sample in 10–14 working days, production lead time 20–25 working days after sample approval. Rigid box sampling runs 15–18 working days for physical samples due to tooling preparation. MOQ for folding cartons starts at 3,000 units per SKU; rigid boxes from 500 units.
Frequently Asked Questions #
Q1: What board weight do you recommend for a premium skincare secondary carton?
A: For premium skincare secondary packaging, we specify 350 GSM SBS as our standard — it gives sufficient panel rigidity for auto-erect cartons and holds matte lamination without warping. Below 300 GSM, tall narrow cartons (like serum boxes) tend to bow after lamination due to moisture differential between the coated and uncoated faces.
Q2: What is your MOQ and lead time for colour cosmetics folding cartons?
A: Our MOQ for folding cartons in this category starts at 3,000 units per SKU, with production lead time of 20–25 working days after sample approval. For rigid boxes, MOQ is 500 units with a 25–30 working day production lead time.
Q3: Do your materials meet EU cosmetic packaging compliance requirements?
A: Yes — we source board certified to EU Regulation 10/2011 for indirect food and cosmetic contact, and our ink systems are REACH-compliant. For brands selling into the EU, we can also supply FSC-certified board and provide the relevant chain-of-custody documentation for your sustainability reporting.
Q4: Can you combine soft-touch lamination with hot stamping on the same panel?
A: We run this combination regularly for premium skincare brands. The key parameter is foil die temperature — on soft-touch laminated stock we reduce die temperature to 80–95°C versus the 90–110°C we use on standard coated stock, because the polyurethane coating is more heat-sensitive. We always run a foil adhesion test on the specific lamination batch before committing to production.
Q5: What causes crease cracking on folded cartons and how do you prevent it?
A: Crease cracking on colour cosmetics cartons is almost always caused by one of two things: lamination applied before the ink is fully cured (trapping solvent under the film), or creasing against the grain direction on board above 300 GSM. On our lines, we enforce a minimum 24-hour ink cure hold before conventional lamination and always orient the main fold lines parallel to the board grain. If a brand’s structural design requires cross-grain folding, we switch to a lighter board grade or score with a wider crease rule to compensate.
Planning a colour cosmetics packaging project? Contact our team to request a complimentary specification review and sample quote.
The 300–350 GSM SBS spec makes sense for most folding carton work, but we’ve had better crease recovery on mascara sleeves dropping to 280 GSM FBB (Folding Box Board) — the middle ply gives you a cleaner score without the springback you sometimes get on heavier SBS calipers. Dot gain tradeoff is real though, FBB runs closer to 15–16% on halftones versus the 12% cited here, so anything with a fine-detail hero image stays on SBS.
The 1.5mm greyboard minimum is accurate but we’ve had lids on magnetic closure palettes start showing stress creasing around cycle 80-100 even at spec — we moved most of our premium candle gift sets to 1.8mm after a bad run in Q3 2023 and haven’t had a return on that issue since.