TL;DR: A complete, accurate brief submitted upfront cuts sleeve and belly band sample iterations from three rounds to one — the artwork file setup is where most delays actually originate.
TL;DR: Provide your finished product dimensions to ±1mm tolerance before requesting a quote — a 3mm error in diameter on a shrink sleeve brief can invalidate the entire dieline.
What Your Brief Needs to Include Before We Can Quote Accurately #
Before any pricing or dieline work begins, we need structural data that most first-time buyers underestimate in precision. For sleeves, belly bands, and wrap-arounds, the critical inputs are different for each format — and conflating them is the most common source of requotes we see.
For a shrink sleeve, we need: the container’s maximum diameter (to ±1mm), the total height to be covered, the shrink ratio required (typically 40–55% for PET sleeves on round containers), and whether the seam will be heat-shrunk in-house or by a contract packager. We also need to know if the container has an irregular taper or embossing, because distortion compensation in the artwork is calculated against the actual container geometry, not a generic shape.
For a belly band, the key structural inputs are the substrate’s flat panel dimensions (length × width of the band after gluing), the gap closure method (self-adhesive tab, glue dot, or friction fit), and the paper grammage your product weight requires. A band wrapping a 200g candle needs different paper stiffness than one wrapping a 30g sachet. We typically specify 200–350 GSM coated or uncoated stock for belly bands depending on load and rigidity requirements.
For a wrap-around, we need the primary pack dimensions (L × W × H) and whether the wrap is a full coverage or partial, because the dieline changes significantly.
| Format | Minimum Structural Inputs | Key Variable to Specify |
|---|---|---|
| Shrink Sleeve | Max diameter, coverage height, shrink ratio | Container taper profile / embossing |
| Belly Band | Band L × W, closure method, paper GSM | Product weight and shelf orientation |
| Wrap-Around | Pack L × W × H, coverage area | Overlap tab width and adhesive method |
| Hang Tag Sleeve | Product thickness, hang hole position | Back-panel print or blank |
The table above captures what triggers a requote if missing. If we receive a brief without the key variable column filled in, we will always come back to ask — which adds 2–3 working days to the first sample cycle.
Where Briefs Break Down and Samples Get Delayed #
The most consistent source of delay across our sleeve and belly band jobs is artwork submitted as low-resolution files with embedded fonts and no bleed. We require print-ready files at 300 DPI minimum for raster elements, with a 3mm bleed on all edges for flat-printed formats (belly bands, wrap-arounds). For shrink sleeves, the bleed requirement extends to 5mm at the top and bottom seam edges, because the shrink process can shift print position by up to 2mm vertically on a standard tunnel application line.
Color files must be submitted in CMYK at the target color profile — we work to ISO 12647-2 for offset and ISO 12647-6 for flexo. If you have Pantone references, send us both the Pantone code and the CMYK breakdown. We match to ΔE ≤ 1.5 on production runs under G7 calibration. Do not send RGB files and expect exact color match — conversion at our end will not reproduce your monitor color, and that mismatch is not a production defect.
The second failure scenario is quantity ambiguity. A buyer requests a quote for “5,000 units” but does not specify whether that is 5,000 individual sleeves, 5,000 finished packs, or 5,000 sheets. For belly bands with a 1-up layout on a 720 × 1020mm sheet, the sheet count, plate cost, and unit price all differ from a 4-up layout. We log this kind of mismatch under Category R in our brief intake tracker — it accounts for roughly a third of all requote events in this category over the past 18 months.
Third issue: material finish specified after tooling is ordered. If you want soft-touch lamination or spot UV on a belly band, that must be in the original brief. Changing from gloss lamination to soft-touch after we have quoted the job adds lamination film cost, changes the adhesion characteristics, and can require re-specifying the glue dot adhesion strength. The cost delta is not trivial on short runs, and the timeline impact on a 2,000-unit sample order can be 4–5 working days.
What Sample Type Should You Actually Request? #
For this packaging category, three sample stages exist — and you do not always need all three.
A white sample (also called a blank structural sample) is cut and formed from unprinted stock at the correct dimensions. This is what you request when you need to physically fit-test the sleeve or band on your product before committing to artwork. Our turnaround on white samples is 5–7 working days from confirmed brief. No artwork is needed at this stage — only structural dimensions.
A printed proof (digital proof or inkjet proof) gives you color and design confirmation without running a full production plate. Useful for sign-off on Pantone accuracy and copy. Not a substitute for evaluating the shrink distortion on a sleeve — a flat inkjet proof will not show you how the artwork warps across the container shoulder.
A production sample (also called a pre-production sample or PP sample) is run on the actual production equipment, with production-grade substrates and inks. This is the sample you evaluate for final approval. Our standard PP sample turnaround for this category is 12–18 working days, assuming a complete brief with approved artwork on day one.
You can skip the printed proof stage if you have worked with us before and trust the Pantone matching data, but we do not recommend skipping the white sample stage for any new container geometry.
Specification Notes for Brand Partners #
When you brief us on a sleeve, belly band, or wrap-around project, the information we most need upfront is: confirmed product dimensions (measured, not estimated), quantity tiers for pricing (we quote three tiers as standard: 1,000 / 5,000 / 10,000 units), your distribution environment (ambient retail, cold chain, or e-commerce fulfillment), and any regulatory print requirements such as recycling symbols, country-of-origin text, or food-contact compliance statements.
The brief gap that causes the most extra sample rounds is an unconfirmed container or product dimensions at the time of briefing. We have had jobs where a buyer submitted sleeve dimensions based on a product prototype that was later revised — the container grew 4mm in diameter and the entire dieline had to be rebuilt. Confirm your physical product before requesting structural samples, not after.
On timeline: a complete brief with approved artwork on day one gives us a PP sample delivery of 12–18 working days for most belly band and wrap-around jobs. Shrink sleeves with complex geometry or specialty substrates (PETG with metallic ink) run 18–25 working days. White sample only runs 5–7 working days. What extends timelines most is artwork revision cycles, not production capacity.
For quote comparison across suppliers, ask each one to specify: substrate GSM and grade, print process (offset vs. flexo vs. digital), lamination film thickness (12µm vs. 18µm BOPP makes a measurable difference in hand-feel), and whether plate/tooling costs are included or quoted separately. These four variables account for most of the apparent price variance you will see between bids.
Frequently Asked Questions #
Can I request a quote without having final artwork ready?
Yes — and for structural formats like belly bands and wrap-arounds, we prefer to quote from dimensions and material spec first, with artwork to follow. Send us your product dimensions, target quantity, material preference, and any finish requirements. We will issue a structural quote and prepare a dieline template you can pass to your designer. This approach avoids the common problem of artwork being built to the wrong dimensions.
What quantity tier makes belly band printing cost-effective?
It depends on the print process and the substrate. For offset-printed belly bands on 250 GSM coated stock, the per-unit cost typically drops significantly between 2,000 and 5,000 units as plate amortization spreads. Below 1,000 units, digital printing is usually the more economical choice — there are no plate costs, but the per-unit ink cost is higher. We can quote both processes at any quantity so you can see the crossover point for your specific job.
How do I evaluate a shrink sleeve sample for quality?
Check four things: seam placement (the vertical seam should be positioned to the least visible face of the container, as agreed in the brief), print registration (our internal QC-09 sleeve inspection protocol flags any registration variance above 0.3mm), shrink distortion against the original artwork (compare the artwork file to the applied sleeve on a filled container, not an empty one — fill weight changes the shrink profile slightly), and edge adhesion at the top and bottom trim. Peeling at the trim edge within 24 hours of application indicates a tunnel temperature or dwell time issue, not a material defect.
What file format should I send for artwork?
Send layered PDF (PDF/X-4 preferred) or AI files with fonts outlined and all linked images embedded at 300 DPI or higher. For metallic ink or foil stamping elements, provide a separate spot color channel labeled clearly. JPEG files are not acceptable for production use regardless of resolution. If your designer works in Illustrator, the export preset “PDF/X-4:2008” will meet our requirements.
How do wrap-around quotes differ from belly band quotes — aren’t they the same thing?
They are structurally different jobs. A belly band is a strip that encircles the product with an open top and bottom — the product is visible above and below the band. A wrap-around fully covers the primary pack on at least four faces and typically uses a lap joint or tuck-in closure. The tooling, substrate weight, and adhesive specification are different for each. Quoting one format with the other’s dimensions will produce an inaccurate price, so specify which format you need before we open the job file.
Planning a packaging project? Contact our team to request a complimentary specification review and sample quote.
The belly band GSM point hits close to home — we spec’d 170gsm uncoated for a band wrapping a 340g skincare kit (glass bottle plus inserts) and had about 30% of units arrive with the band completely split at the glue dot closure after a 3-day FedEx ground cycle. Went back to the supplier and they’d never flagged that 170gsm was under their own recommended minimum for anything over 250g load. Switched to 250gsm with a self-adhesive tab and didn’t see another failure that quarter.
The 40–55% shrink ratio range is correct for standard round PET containers, but we’ve had consistent issues applying that spec to oval or flask-shaped bottles where the minor axis shrink requirement drops to around 30–35% while the major axis still needs the full 50%+ — submitting a single ratio figure on those briefs has caused us two failed sample rounds before we started supplying axis-specific shrink data separately.
On the belly band GSM range — does the 200–350 spec assume the band is bearing load flat on shelf, or does that window still hold for bands on a cylindrical vessel where the stiffness requirement shifts to hoop resistance rather than flat rigidity?
The belly band GSM guidance tracks with what we’ve seen — we ran a short run of 250 GSM uncoated on a 180g glass jar candle last quarter and had roughly 12% of bands buckling at the overlap tab under ambient warehouse conditions (28°C, high humidity). Bumped to 300 GSM and the issue disappeared entirely.
On the wrap-around side, the overlap tab width spec is where we’ve consistently seen quote revisions — we submitted a brief for a 90 × 60 × 40mm rigid box wrap-around last year with a 10mm overlap tab and the supplier came back requiring 15mm minimum for the hotmelt adhesive method, which invalidated our pre-approved dieline and pushed sampling back three weeks.
The seam placement spec for shrink sleeves is where we’ve consistently lost time — our contract packager in Antwerp runs a rotary steam tunnel and won’t accept a seam within 8mm of any embossed feature, which meant a full dieline revision three weeks into a sampling cycle that was already at round two.
Switching our belly band substrate from 250 GSM coated to an uncoated FSC-certified stock last spring forced a complete requote cycle because the caliper difference (about 0.15mm) pushed us outside the original dieline tolerance — so now we flag certification requirements in the initial brief as a structural input, not an afterthought.
Friction fit closure on belly bands saved us roughly $0.06/unit versus self-adhesive tab at our 10k run volume last year — the tab tooling setup on our converter’s line carried a £320 plate charge that only amortizes if you’re above 15k units. Worth flagging in the brief stage rather than discovering it at quote.