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Sleeve press and EB combine for savings

New 67”-wide 10-station flexo press with electron-beam coating and curing earns Exopack lots of private-label lawn and garden packaging business with Fafard.

Examining press sheets at Exopack are (left to right): Charlie Ratterree of Fafard, Jeff Wagner of Exopack, and Eric Nurnberger
Examining press sheets at Exopack are (left to right): Charlie Ratterree of Fafard, Jeff Wagner of Exopack, and Eric Nurnberger

Lawn and garden packager Fafard is providing its private-label customers with the equivalent of laminated lawn and garden bags using a polyethylene-based coextrusion that’s surface-printed flexo and given an electron-beam-cured coating. Exopack prints the film on a new flexo press from Fischer & Krecke. The press employs an EB coating and curing system from Energy Sciences, Inc. The process can result in a thinner bag for source reduction and cost savings.

The year-old press also includes a special pRegister system from AVT that has begun to deliver big scrap savings to the Tomah, WI, Exopack converting plant.

The in-line EB-coated bag offers a new alternative for lawn and garden bags that are often stored outdoors. Printed and coated in a single pass, this process yields most of the benefits of a surface-printed bag, but adds extra protection. A surface-printed bag is most economical, but it offers little protection for the printing. Most costly is a laminated bag, where the clear surface film layer protects the printing while it adds gloss. But it requires two separate converting steps that not only adds cost, but also involves extra curing time.

“Electron-beam-cured lacquer gives a nice middle ground between a surface-printed bag and a laminated bag,” says Charles Ratterree, art director and print buyer for Agawam, MA-based Conrad Fafard, Inc. Ratterree, who works out of Anderson, SC, helps private-label accounts with graphics, then turns his hat around and bargains for the best prices. “It’s my job to make sure our client receives a top-quality design, a fair price for the bags, and that they don’t have to worry about it. Sometimes, like customer Pike Family Nurseries in the Atlanta area, the project is more hands-on. Other times, we’re just told ‘create our brand.’”

Fafard’s products and those of its private-label customers are sold only through independent garden centers that compete with high-volume retailers such as Lowe’s and Home Depot. “They need to have a great-looking package to be competitive,” Ratterree says. “What makes it difficult is that they can’t print ten million impressions like the big guys, so they don’t get the volume cost breaks.”

In the case of Pike’s bags, the bags are all seven-color flexo, four process colors and three special colors, plus the EB-cured edge-to-edge coating. Exopack not only prints and coats, it also coextrudes the primary material and then later converts the printed rollstock into bags.

Exopack specially engineers the coextruded white film in a proprietary blend that’s based on polyethylene. “We blend the coextruded material to have more stiffness, especially if we go down in gauge,” says Mark Pfeiffer, national account sales manager at Exopack. “Our goal is to make a bag that not only looks but performs the same as a laminated bag. There’s only a slight difference in terms of gloss, bag performance, or characteristics like coefficient-of-friction.

“In every job we’ve done with Fafard and its clients so far, the gauge of the bag is thinner than what had been used in a laminated bag,” Pfeiffer continues. “This helps in material reduction, source reduction, and cost reduction, too.” Exopack ships converted bags to Fafard’s Anderson, SC, plant for product packaging. Because the resulting products may be stored outside at garden centers, they need ultraviolet light (UV) protection.

“The white tint of the base material has UV protection built in,” says Lani Craddock, director of business development for Exopack. “The inks are also specially formulated for UV protection.” The inks come from Color Converting Industries. The company has used several sources for the EB coating.

New press at Exopack

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