Plastic Packaging Design

Plastic Packaging Design Concept

 

Effective plastic packaging design takes into account both aesthetics and engineering. Dordan carefully considers your specific products and markets throughout the design and development of your packaging. This level of detailed planning leads to unique packages, tailored to your needs. For example, a tray for surgical instruments and a cosmetic display tray are both examples of thermoformed packages... but with very different purposes. Dordan carefully considers each packaging design challenge and designs specific solutions tailored to the product and the market. This level of attention leads to a package that protects and presents your products in a way that enhances their value.

 

Plastic Packaging Design Tooling

Dordan uses that same team of engineers for the design of your packaging concept and the design of your tooling. Your project stays with the same group throughout its complete design phase – leading to greater continuity, consistency, and quality. Your tooling status is available for your review at any point, and visuals aids can be viewed via computer prior to any metal cutting. You can easily follow the progress of your project and view your part drawings and solid models in real time. The highest quality materials, the latest equipment and technology, and a dedication to excellence are all utilized to help make Dordan’s tooling unsurpassed in the packaging industry.

 

 

Dordan Mfg. Co. Inc. is a Illinois based manufacturer of custom thermoformed clamshells, components, blisters, bifolds and tray packaging items that services all of North America.

recent news, click for details

February 26, 2010:
Algae to replace Petroleum content in Plastics?


While many have heard algae being proclaimed as the fuel source that could potentially replace a large part of the petroleum we use, Cleantechies.com’s Feb. 26th blog post discusses the application of algae to the plastics industry as another renewable resin.[1] Cereplast, a renewable plastics company, announced in Oct. 2009 that algae-based resins “could replace 50% or more of the petroleum c
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