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Academy of Handmade

11/18/2014

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We were so pleased when the Academy of Handmade asked us to write about why we love to sell on Instagram, and review Sue B. Zimmerman's workshop on Creative Live. 

Read about it all here ~> http://bit.ly/AcademyofHandmade

If you have a story about where you like to sell your handmade goods, or if you just love Instagram like me, leave a comment below!
 
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Glitter as an Initiative

11/17/2014

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#sparkleinitiative - a compliment, a smile, a pat on the back have the power to transform and move mountains.

Every day there's a chance to sparkle. We know how that sounds! We, along with so many of you, get bogged down when watching the news or reading negative things right in your Facebook timeline. And sometimes those things are heavy and genuinely debilitating. We aren't suggesting a Pollyanna attitude. But close.  How do we handle it all without getting overwhelmed? Especially during the holidays?

Enter attitude. It's that thing only you can control on a daily basis, and it has the power to help or harm. So when we say that a little bit of sparkle can solve most problems, what we mean is that focusing on how to make a situation better, by doing only what we can control, can turn negatives into positives.

This holiday season is a great time to test out sparkle at holiday gatherings, and getting into the sparkly mood. Remember, the only thing you can control is yourself. Let go of other people's opinions and allow only the things that exude positivity into your realm of influence. 

Go forth and sparkle!
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Blog

40% Waste Drop and Changeovers Down by 25 Minutes: A Digital–Flexo Label Upgrade for an Asia F&B Brand

Posted on Tuesday 25th of November 2025
  • Company Overview and History
  • Quality and Consistency Issues
  • Solution Design and Configuration
  • Quantitative Results and Metrics

In six months, Kinara Ferments, a Singapore-based F&B brand, brought labeling waste down by roughly 40% and removed 25 minutes from average changeovers. Early prototypes ran through onlinelabels templates to trial shapes and materials without tying up press time. Color stability tightened too: for brand-critical reds and greens, 95% of SKUs now sit within ΔE 2.

The business sells condiments and preserves in glass containers across Southeast Asia and exports to North America. Their mix includes wrap-around and front–back sets, essentially labels for jars that must survive high humidity, frequent condensation, and chilled distribution.

This is the full project story—from baseline to steady state—covering what actually changed on press, what stayed on the wish list, and where the team still sees room for tuning.

Company Overview and History

Kinara Ferments started as a farmers’ market stall in 2016 and now runs a small production site in Singapore. The team manages roughly 60 SKUs, with monthly lots ranging from 1,500 to 12,000 labels. Most products live in 240–500 ml glass jars, so the labeling program revolves around jar curves, wet handling, and clean removability during recycling.

Before the project, the label program relied on one narrow-web 8-color Flexographic Printing line (UV Ink) for steady movers and a desktop Laser Printing setup for micro-batches. Substrates were split between coated paper labelstock for room-temp items and PP film for chilled lines. Finishing included Lamination for moisture resistance and Die-Cutting for custom shapes; QC was visual checks with sporadic spectro readings.

As volumes grew and SKUs multiplied, the team wanted a cleaner process for small runs and seasonal variants. They also needed a more predictable pathway for developing new labels for jars without reserving full press time for early prototyping.

Quality and Consistency Issues

Three issues kept recurring. First, color drift: key brand tones would wander by ΔE 4–6 across lots, especially when switching between coated paper and PP film. Second, waste: rejects consistently hovered around 8–10%, driven by setup scrap and intermittent registration variation on tight-radius shapes. Third, humidity: labels occasionally lifted at seams in 70–85% RH conditions, causing rework and consumer returns.

See also Which Print Technology Fits Your Packaging—Digital, Offset, or UV Flexo?

Emergency reprints were another signal. When a retailer pulled forward a promo, the team would rush art through basic tools—yes, even a quick refresher on how to make labels on google docs—for temporary packs. It worked in a pinch, but die-line alignment and bleed setup weren’t perfect, adding 2–3% extra waste on those lots. We needed a stable, teachable workflow for short runs that still respected print-ready standards.

Solution Design and Configuration

We pivoted to a hybrid model. Short- and micro-runs moved to Digital Printing (UV Inkjet), with process control aligned to ISO 12647/G7 targets and ΔE ≤ 2 on brand-critical colors. Steady movers stayed on Flexographic Printing with calibrated anilox selection, consistent UV dose, and a tighter SOP for color verification. We standardized spectrophotometer checks at make-ready and mid-run, not just at lot closeout.

Materials were re-qualified. For chilled products, we specified a PP film labelstock with a high-tack, moisture-tolerant adhesive and a matte Lamination to combat condensation. For ambient lines, coated paper remained, but we set stricter ink–substrate test points and a minimum dwell before slitting to stabilize color. Die-Cutting pressure and stripping settings were documented per shape to reduce edge lift on tight radii.

For early-stage concept work and micro-batches headed to Canadian channels, the team used print labels online to avoid tying up the press. They trialed die shapes with pre-cut sheets and small reels, including a first sample order which benefited from an onlinelabels $10 off welcome credit. For outbound tests near Vancouver, onlinelabels canada handled small replenishments without cross-ocean freight. We also issued a basic templating guide so staff could convert quick drafts (those emergency Google Docs layouts) into proper print-ready files.

Quantitative Results and Metrics

Against the original baseline, scrap dropped by about 40% on average, driven by steadier make-readies and fewer color restarts. Median changeover time fell from roughly 85 minutes to about 60, freeing capacity. FPY% rose into the 93–95% band on stable SKUs, and 90–92% on variants with metallic foils that still require extra care. For color, 95% of brand-critical SKUs now land within ΔE 2, and the remainder sit within ΔE 3 due to special effects or unusual substrates.

See also Optimizing Hybrid Printing for Labels: A Practical EU Playbook

Throughput went up by roughly 18–22% on the flexo line thanks to fewer mid-run stops. Pre-printed inventory for seasonal labels shrank by 30–35%, since short runs can now move to digital with minimal setup. Payback looks realistic in 9–12 months, depending on SKU mix and seasonal peaks. It’s not a silver bullet—metallic inks and certain tactile finishes still run best on dedicated setups—but the day-to-day program is steadier. For very small pilots and export tests, the team continues to route micro-batches through onlinelabels to keep press time focused on core jobs.

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Jane Smith

I’m Jane Smith, a senior content writer with over 15 years of experience in the packaging and printing industry. I specialize in writing about the latest trends, technologies, and best practices in packaging design, sustainability, and printing techniques. My goal is to help businesses understand complex printing processes and design solutions that enhance both product packaging and brand visibility.

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