It doesn't look very professional, though... :frown:bms;65478 wrote:A piece of tape over the crack works fine for posting.
best way to post mugs?
Re: best way to post mugs?
Re: best way to post mugs?
if you're putting tape around the poly box anyway then I don't see this makes a difference. The tape will cover the join of the two halves and any possible crack. Job done.JSR;65565 wrote:It doesn't look very professional, though... :frown:
Re: best way to post mugs?
It's just that if packaging arrives that's "pre-damaged", some people think that it's taken a shock in posting and might believe the mug has been damaged, too.bms;65569 wrote:if you're putting tape around the poly box anyway then I don't see this makes a difference. The tape will cover the join of the two halves and any possible crack. Job done.
I have sent "large handle" mugs in polystyrene boxes before - when I run out of bespoke boxes for El Grande mugs, I'm a past master at carving up the poly boxes to make them fit the 15oz mugs (never mind the 11oz jobbies). I just don't think they look professional once you've "pre-damaged" them.
That's why I stick with the smaller-handle 10oz mugs for the most part, I suppose.
Re: best way to post mugs?
I've just been looking at packaging options too and came across this site: http://www.cera-packaging.com/mug-mailers-p-295.html - has anyone used them? They do a number of different sizes (incl. latte) and colours. Their single mug, brown box goes down to 12p!
From the website:
cardboard mailers available in brown, white, blue, green and burgundy no extra packing needed
no glue or tape required
approved by parcel force, post office and fedex etc
From the website:
cardboard mailers available in brown, white, blue, green and burgundy no extra packing needed
no glue or tape required
approved by parcel force, post office and fedex etc
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