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May 31, 1995
Labeled HIPS jar saves over tinplate
When Consolidated Cigar learned that the decorated tin-plate steel can it was using for its 25-count package of La Corona Whiffs would soon be discontinued, it turned this potentially negative development into a big plus.
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The replacement container selected by the Fort Lauderdale FL firm costs about 30% less including cap and shrink sleeve label while performing every bit as well as the one it replaced. Custom injection molded of high-impact polystyrene by Serafini (Gastonia NC) the oval-shaped container sports a polyvinyl chloride full-wrap shrink sleeve label supplied by CMS Gilbreth (Trevose PA). The 1.5-mil label is reverse-printed on a gravure press in five colors plus lacquer for Whiffs in six colors for Whiffs Light. Labels are applied by hand in Consolidated's Puerto Rico plant and then heat shrunk to a tight fit. Decoration isn't the label's only function. It also serves as a TE seal because it bonds the container and the cover into a single unit. To open the pack horizontal perforations make it easy to remove the top part of the label without affecting the label that remains on
the container sidewall. According to Consolidated's vice president of purchasing and packaging Earl Helgesen it was important that the new package be a dead ringer for the one it was replacing. Thanks to the custom mold it is. Helgesen also says that a few adjustments had to be made in the size of the sleeve so that the bar code on the back would be scannable after the label was shrunk.
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