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Recent Articles
Summer 2005 Newsletter

Global Packaging Alliance Adds New Member in India  


Global Packaging Alliance (GPA)The Global Packaging Alliance (GPA) announced that they have added a new partner in India by signing an agreement with Kumar Printers Pvt. Ltd, located in Gurgaon. Kumar Printers is one of the premier folding carton manufacturers in India, producing high-end packaging for the pharmaceutical, healthcare and personal care markets.

GPA members visited several potential partners in India to assess which best complement the GPA’s current network in terms of management philosophy, technical capabilities and markets served, with the goal of extending the alliance’s global reach and service to its customers. India represents a unique opportunity, with a growing economy and changing consumer habits expected to spur the growth of packaging products.

Kumar Printers offers a full range of services and is geared to meet all functional, marketing, and promotional requirements of packaging. Their extensive capabilities include in-house structural design, offset printing with inline UV coating, foil stamping, embossing, die cutting, windowing, gluing, and converting microflute cartons and point-of-sale displays. They also print on non-absorbent substrates such as metallized board and plastic foil, and can apply specialized coatings utilizing metallic, pearlescent and Iriodin® pigments.

“Kumar Printers is a natural fit,” said Harry Voss, Chairman of Diamond Packaging. “Their strength in successfully combining the latest technology with innovation to maintain a strategic advantage for our customers embodies all that GPA has to offer.”

The Global Packaging Alliance is an international organization of independent packaging experts proficient at managing all aspects of the supply chain. With state-of-the-art production facilities and logistics centers around the world, the GPA provides responsive, localized service, award-winning creative designs, identical product specifications and consistent brand recognition, resulting in unparalleled global packaging support. Members include:

  • Diamond Packaging - Rochester, NY, USA
  • Rob. Leunis & Chapman Group - Hannover, Germany
  • Colorpak Packaging Group - Melbourne, Australia
  • Gonçalves SA Indústria Gráfica - Sao Paolo, Brazil
  • JSC Polygrafoformlenie - St. Petersburg, Russia
  • Yau Bon Offset Printing - Quarry Bay, Hong Kong
  • Cartmont - Tlalnepantla, Mexico
  • Kumar Printers - Gurgaon, India

GPA members practice packaging management geared toward the needs of international companies, including Agfa-Gevaert, Bayer, Beiersdorf, Eastman Kodak, The Gillette Company, GlaxoSmithKline, L’Oreal, Nestlé, Schering Plough and Unilever. This includes designing and producing innovative paperboard and plastic packaging, as well as providing logistical services such as fulfillment and POP management. The GPA’s goal is to support clients in launching new brands or products, while significantly reducing time-to-market.

For more information about the Global Packaging Alliance, contact Dennis Bacchetta at (585) 334-8030 x229 or visit the website at www.global-packaging-alliance.com.


Diamond Wins Three Premier Print Awards  


L'Oreal's holiday folding cartons feature a .022 SBS foilboard complemented by stunning holographic foil stamping and embossing.Diamond Packaging of Rochester, NY earned three awards in the 2005 Premier Print Awards Competition, the graphic arts industry's largest and most prestigious worldwide printing competition.

The Premier Print Awards is sponsored by the Printing Industries of America / Graphic Arts Technical Foundation. Now in its 56th year, the annual contest recognizes excellence in print communications and rewards companies and individuals who produce the best in print media.

Diamond competed against more than 5,200 entries from printing and graphic arts firms from around the world, and received two awards for the L’Oreal USA / Matrix 2004 holiday packaging and an award for its own 2005 corporate calendar.

"We're very proud of our winning team," said Harry Voss, Chairman of Diamond Packaging. "It's an honor to be recognized by the industry as a company that produces top quality, award-winning materials."

Michael Makin, president and CEO of PIA/GATF, agrees. "Each year, the field of entries attracts impressive work from some of the best printers in the world. Only a very small number receive an Award of Recognition. Diamond’s craftsmanship and hard work enabled them to produce an award winning piece in the face of some very tough competition."

Diamond employed special graphic techniques for the L’Oreal USA / Matrix holiday packaging, elevating a standard tuck carton to an unprecedented level. All cartons feature a .022 SBS foilboard complemented by stunning holographic foil stamping and embossing. Holographic foil was chosen for its striking visual impact and its evocation of snowflakes, making it perfect for the holiday season. Special color inks and matte UV coating further enhance the graphics. Prominently displayed at fine hair salons nationwide, the annual promotion is a proven success and highlights the value of creativity and shelf appeal.

Diamond’s corporate calendar was designed with a nature theme that extended from the header, backer, and calendar pages to the specially designed Forte™ shipper. Each panel is distinguished by techniques highlighting the individual graphics. The top backer utilizes a pearlescent UV spot coating applied to the red and pink flowers, imparting greater visual interest. A unifraction die combined with copper foil stamping (prior to printing) delivers added detail in the leaves of the middle backer. The bottom backer conveys unusual depth and distinction through the use of foil stamping and multi-level embossing.

Since 1911, Diamond Packaging has dedicated itself to providing the highest standard of quality, innovation and cost effective packaging for companies including The Gillette Company, Beiersdorf, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Coty, Eastman Kodak, Godiva Chocolatier, and L’Oreal USA. As part of the Global Packaging Alliance (GPA), Diamond Packaging and its alliance members offer packaging solutions to companies operating on an international scale. Customers receive responsive, localized service, award-winning creative designs, identical product specifications and consistent brand recognition, resulting in unparalleled worldwide packaging support.

For more information about Diamond Packaging, contact Dennis Bacchetta at (585) 334-8030 x229 or visit the website at www.diamondpackaging.com. For more information about the Premier Print Awards, contact Suzette Margolis at (215) 591-2468 or visit the website at www.gain.net.


The Allure of Plastic: A Look at PVC Folding Cartons
by Dennis Bacchetta
 


The Allure of Plastic Folding Cartons by Dennis BacchettaPlastic has traditionally been recognized for its functional capabilities. It is strong, resilient and at least semi-impermeable, making it a sensible choice for packaging perishable or environmentally sensitive liquids like milk, detergent and other cleaning agents.

However, over the last five years plastic has steadily gained favor for its aesthetic properties, and is now recognized as a clear winner in the competition for shelf appeal. Plastic packaging is available in a variety of elegant finishes and effects that allow the beauty of your product to show through. Clear, lined and frosted versions can be matched to almost any color for maximum brand exposure and custom product design.

Additionally, plastic converters have mastered techniques once reserved for paperboard, such as printing on plastic, spot coating, foil stamping and embossing, making plastic as attractive as it is functional.

It is this unique combination of beauty and durability that makes plastic ideal for versatile product packaging and point-of-purchase (POP) displays.

Although plastic is growing in popularity, paperboard still predominates on the retail shelf. Choosing plastic packaging is an excellent way to differentiate your company and your product in a crowded retail environment.

Given the wide variety of plastic substrates available today, including PVC, APET, PET, PETG, polyethylene, and polypropylene, it is helpful to compare material performance characteristics with project specifications in order to select the best plastic for your application.

Polyvinylchloride (PVC) is one of the most popular plastic substrates used for carton converting. PVC, commonly referred to as “vinyl”, is available in either flexible or rigid form, with material thickness from .007 to .020 gauge. Rigid PVC folding cartons combine maximum visibility with package integrity. The enclosed product is held securely and is viewable from every angle for dramatic shelf impact.

Custom finishing techniques such as radio frequency (RF) scoring create rounder, softer box edges that add a unique look and feel to any package. Brand logos and other graphics can be added by offset printing either custom colors or standard 4-color process inks.

Box grade PVC is economical, RF seal-able, and has a high impact modifier that resists cracking to temperatures of -31 degrees Fahrenheit. It is, however, slightly more brittle than some of the other plastic substrates, so it may not be the best choice for a package that will be subject to excessive manipulation during finishing or in the retail setting.

Although each plastic substrate exhibits unique performance characteristics, there are some universal principles to consider when printing on plastics:

  • Plastic doesn’t absorb water. Excessive use of fountain solution on any substrate, but especially plastic, slows ink oxidation and impairs adhesion. For optimum performance inks that are specifically formulated for printing on plastic should be used. These inks are designed to perform with minimal water, allowing the printer to reduce the amount of fountain chemistry and improve adhesion. Furthermore, printing with UV inks allows for greater latitude than printing with conventional inks. Since UV inks are cured rather than oxidized, drying is less of an issue.
  • Dyne level variations are greater with plastic than with paper. Ink bonds to the substrate by surface-tension potential, or dyne level. Optimum dyne level is 40. If the dyne level is too low (below 38) it will be difficult for the ink to dry and it is likely to rub off, whereas a dyne level that is too high (above 50) will create significant static. For optimum results, a sample of the plastic substrate should be measured for its dyne level and then matched to a suitable ink.
  • Plastic tends to accumulate static. When printing on plastic it is especially important to use an anti-static device on the press and to regulate pressroom temperature and humidity.

Plastic has added a whole new dimension to packaging, turning the ordinary into the extraordinary. As you can see, however, choosing a substrate is more complex than simply asking “paper or plastic?” Choosing a folding carton supplier with experience and expertise in converting plastic is just as important to the decision making process.

In the next newsletter we’ll explore APET, another popular plastic substrate. In the meantime, consider the advantages of plastic for your next package design.


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Diamond Packaging is a WBENC-Certified Women's Business Enterprise. Diamond is a WBENC-Certified Women's Business Enterprise...more
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