Order via email and use code XM888888 to enjoy 15% off your purchase

"We had to get ΔE under 2 on corrugated—without slowing the line" — Box&Go’s Plant Lead

[Challenge] Box&Go, a fast-growing moving-supplies retailer, needed consistent color on corrugated shippers and kraft handle bags across five contract plants. Early runs looked acceptable in isolation, then fell apart side by side on shelf and during e-commerce unboxing. They brought in **papermart** for supply alignment and asked us to lock down the print process without adding steps, headcount, or time.

The target was clear: close color drift to ΔE 1.8–2.2 on branded blues, reduce scrap, and keep throughput. The complication? Different board grades (B/C-flute mixes), varying humidity control, and a mix of preprint and postprint workflows. Six weeks is not a lot of time to change habits on a live line.

Company Overview and History

Box&Go started online, then expanded into retail partners in 2019. Volume moved quickly from 2–3 SKUs to 20+, with seasonal bundles and co-branded kits. Corrugated Board shipper boxes were produced in the Midwest, while kraft merchandise bags were sourced on the West Coast. As their assortment grew, they added tape, labels, and printed inserts. A recent line extension—promo prints on papermart bags—pushed consistency from “nice to have” to operational requirement.

Their customers search by function first—think moving dollies, tape guns—and then judge packaging at delivery. The team kept hearing the same phrase in community posts about moving: moving with boxes is stressful; damaged or mismatched branding doesn’t help confidence. That comment tracked with returns data and support tickets after peak season.

By Q2, Box&Go was managing five contract plants, each with slightly different board specs, water-based Ink recipes, and anilox inventories. One plant ran 120 lpi, another 133 lpi. None were wrong, but unified output was impossible without a shared target and process book.

Quality and Consistency Issues

The core issue was color: ΔE ran 3.5–5.0 against the master for the brand blue on postprint corrugated. Humidity swings lowered ink holdout on some C-flute liners, yielding a duller tone. On kraft bags, uncoated absorption created a two-step shift—darker at start-up, lighter near the end of a long run. FPY sat around 82–85%, and waste hovered near 8–10% on changeovers. None of this is unusual, but together it eroded trust.

Social proof touched a nerve. A cluster of user posts—similar to stack moving boxes reviews—called out mismatched print between bundle components. That wasn’t the main reason to act, but it made the cost visible. The plant leads asked for one playbook, one proofing method, and fewer "interpretations" of the brand blue.

Solution Design and Configuration

We standardized around Flexographic Printing with water-based Ink on corrugated, defined a single target with G7 calibration, and issued an ISO 12647-aligned process book. Press-side: 4.0–4.8 bcm anilox for solids, 120–133 lpi line screens for type-heavy panels, and 55–60 Shore A plates to balance dot gain and crush on mixed flutes. Varnishing moved to a dedicated water-based topcoat station to stabilize gloss and rub. For bags, we held the same target tone with a modified formula using Food-Safe Ink on Kraft Paper, proofed against a laminated drawdown set with controlled moisture.

To close the loop with marketing, we introduced a hybrid element: a small digital Inkjet insert with a serialized QR. The landing page answered a top SEO question—where to get free boxes for moving—and offered a seasonal code. On the corrugated inside flap, we printed a short URL and a discreet “papermart coupon code” callout for cross-channel tracking. Variable Data ran on the digital side only; flexo plates stayed static.

Two trade-offs to note. First, chasing ΔE under 2.0 on recycled liners can overrun make-ready time if humidity control is loose; we set a practical band at 1.8–2.2. Second, the standardized anilox/ink combo isn’t universal for all art; dense reverse type still benefits from a finer screen. We kept an exception list and a sign-off workflow so engineers could deviate with reason.

Quantitative Results and Metrics

After pilot and two production cycles, color variance on the brand blue landed at ΔE 1.8–2.3 across all sites. FPY moved from 82–85% to 92–94%. Scrap on changeovers went from roughly 8–10% to around 3–4%, and weekly start-up waste dropped from 1,200–1,500 linear feet to 500–700. Changeover Time fell from 28–35 minutes to 18–22 with the shared ink/anilox set and a tighter preflight checklist. Throughput per shift on the main shipper line went from about 9.5k to 10.8k boxes, mostly via steadier run speed rather than nameplate changes.

On the marketing side, the QR insert posted a 2–3% click-through during peak season, with about one-third of scans tied to the short URL on the inside flap. Energy per pack (kWh/pack) edged from 0.12–0.13 down to around 0.10–0.11 with fewer re-runs. Payback Period modeled in the 9–12 month range, depending on volume mix. Results will vary if board specs or climate control differ, and this setup won’t outperform Digital Printing for short-run specials. Still, for high-volume shipper boxes and kraft bags, the balance held. Box&Go kept the playbook and extended it to two new SKUs with papermart coordinating supply.

Leave a Reply