{"id":10204,"date":"2026-05-29T15:20:55","date_gmt":"2026-05-29T15:20:55","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/goldensoarpackage.com\/en\/travel-lotion-bottles-research\/"},"modified":"2026-05-29T15:20:55","modified_gmt":"2026-05-29T15:20:55","slug":"travel-lotion-bottles-research","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/goldensoarpackage.com\/fr\/travel-lotion-bottles-research\/","title":{"rendered":"Travel Lotion Bottles Research Report"},"content":{"rendered":"<style>\n            div.magazine-style-content {\n                font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; \n                color: #333333;\n                line-height: 1.6;\n                font-size: 15px;\n                max-width: 850px; \n                margin: 0 auto;\n                padding: 20px 0;\n            }<\/p>\n<p>            \/* \u5f3a\u5236\u9547\u538b\u4e3b\u9898\u7684 H2 \u6837\u5f0f\uff0c\u593a\u56de\u84dd\u8272\u4e0b\u5212\u7ebf\u63a7\u5236\u6743 *\/\n            div.magazine-style-content h2 { \n                font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif !important;\n                color: #1f497d !important; \n                font-size: 22px !important; \n                font-weight: bold !important;\n                margin-top: 40px !important; \n                margin-bottom: 20px !important; \n                border-bottom: 2px solid #e0e0e0 !important; \n                padding-bottom: 8px !important;\n            }<\/p>\n<p>            \/* \u5217\u8868\u7f29\u8fdb\u4fee\u590d\uff1a\u786e\u4fdd\u5b9e\u5fc3\u5706\u70b9\u5217\u8868\u80fd\u6b63\u5e38\u663e\u793a *\/\n            div.magazine-style-content ul, div.magazine-style-content ol { margin-left: 20px !important; margin-bottom: 15px !important; }\n            div.magazine-style-content li { margin-bottom: 8px !important; }<\/p>\n<p>            \/* UI\u7ec4\u4ef61\uff1aShort Answer *\/\n            div.magazine-style-content .ui-short-answer {\n                background-color: #fcf1f1 !important;\n                border-left: 5px solid #c00000 !important; \n                padding: 15px 20px !important;\n                margin: 25px 0 !important;\n            }\n            div.magazine-style-content .ui-short-answer h3 { color: #c00000 !important; font-size: 16px !important; margin-top: 0 !important; margin-bottom: 10px !important; text-transform: uppercase !important; }<\/p>\n<p>            \/* UI\u7ec4\u4ef62\uff1aKey Takeaways *\/\n            div.magazine-style-content .ui-takeaway-box {\n                background-color: #fef7f1 !important;\n                border: 1px solid #fbdab5 !important;\n                padding: 20px !important;\n                margin: 30px 0 !important;\n            }\n            div.magazine-style-content .ui-takeaway-box h3 { color: #e36c09 !important; font-size: 16px !important; margin-top: 0 !important; margin-bottom: 15px !important; }<\/p>\n<p>            \/* UI\u7ec4\u4ef63\uff1aPro-Tip *\/\n            div.magazine-style-content .ui-blue-box {\n                background-color: #f2f7fc !important;\n                border: 1px solid #c6d9f1 !important;\n                padding: 20px !important;\n                margin: 30px 0 !important;\n            }\n            div.magazine-style-content .ui-blue-box h3 { color: #1f497d !important; font-size: 16px !important; margin-top: 0 !important; margin-bottom: 15px !important; }<\/p>\n<p>            \/* \u8868\u683c 1:1 \u8fd8\u539f *\/\n            div.magazine-style-content table { width: 100% !important; border-collapse: collapse !important; margin: 30px 0 !important; font-size: 14px !important; border: 1px solid #d9d9d9 !important; }\n            div.magazine-style-content th { background-color: #243f60 !important; color: #ffffff !important; font-weight: bold !important; padding: 12px 15px !important; text-align: left !important; border: 1px solid #d9d9d9 !important; }\n            div.magazine-style-content td { padding: 12px 15px !important; border: 1px solid #d9d9d9 !important; color: #333 !important; }\n            div.magazine-style-content tr:nth-child(even) { background-color: #f2f2f2 !important; }\n            div.magazine-style-content tr:nth-child(odd) { background-color: #ffffff !important; }<\/p>\n<p>            div.magazine-style-content img { max-width: 100% !important; height: auto !important; display: block !important; margin: 30px auto !important; }<\/p>\n<p>            \/* FAQ \u533a\u57df\u8fd8\u539f *\/\n            div.magazine-style-content h3.faq-question { color: #c00000 !important; font-size: 16px !important; margin-top: 30px !important; margin-bottom: 10px !important; }\n            div.magazine-style-content p.faq-answer { margin-bottom: 25px !important; }\n        <\/style>\n<div class='magazine-style-content'>\n<h1>Travel Lotion Bottles Research Report<\/h1>\n<p><strong>Reference Standard:<\/strong> Relevant material and performance testing standards, including ASTM D1693 for environmental stress-cracking resistance of polyethylene materials and ISO 9001:2015 for quality management systems.<\/p>\n<h2>Short Answer<\/h2>\n<p><div class=\"ui-short-answer\">\nTravel lotion bottles for shampoo, shower gel, and body lotion should be evaluated by use scenario, not only by appearance or stated capacity. A PE bottle body with a PP flip top cap, combined with verified 120ml and 150ml size options, gives buyers a practical basis for checking portability, refill behavior, squeeze comfort, and pre-shipment consistency.\n<\/div>\n<\/p>\n<p>Travel lotion bottles look simple, but their real performance depends on a compact group of measurable factors: <strong>PE bottle body<\/strong>, <strong>PP flip top cap<\/strong>, <strong>120ml bottle full capacity of 131ml<\/strong>, <strong>150ml bottle full capacity of 163ml<\/strong>, <strong>6.8g lid weight<\/strong>, <strong>13.3g 120ml bottle weight<\/strong>, <strong>15.3g 150ml bottle weight<\/strong>, and application suitability for <strong>shower gel, shampoo, and body lotion<\/strong>. For personal care brands, hotel amenity suppliers, travel kit distributors, and private-label cosmetic buyers, these details matter because the bottle is exposed to repeated packing, wet bathroom handling, refill cycles, and pressure from luggage or storage bins.<\/p>\n<p>This research report does not treat the product as a generic small plastic container. It examines the travel bottle as a portable dispensing system: a squeezable PE reservoir, a PP closure, a compact volume format, and a customizable branding surface. The goal is to identify how buyers can turn catalog data into a more reliable procurement screen before ordering in bulk.<\/p>\n<h2>From Hotel Amenity Kits to Outdoor Toiletry Packs: Why 120ml \/ 150ml PE Travel Lotion Bottles Need Scenario-Based Screening<\/h2>\n<p>The first screening step is not asking whether a travel bottle is \u201csmall enough.\u201d The better question is where the bottle will live during its service life. A hotel amenity bottle may sit upright in a bathroom tray, while an outdoor toiletry pack may be compressed between towels, clothing, sunscreen, and wet accessories. A daily refill bottle may be opened several times a week, while a seasonal travel kit may be stored for months and then used intensively during a trip.<\/p>\n<p>The catalog data gives two working sizes: <strong>120ml bouteille pleine capacit\u00e9 : 131ml<\/strong> et <strong>Capacit\u00e9 totale du flacon de 150 ml : 163 ml<\/strong>. This distinction is important because nominal size and full capacity are not the same operational idea. Nominal size reflects the product format that buyers recognize in a set. Full capacity reflects the physical volume boundary of the container. In real use, shampoo, shower gel, and body lotion differ in flow behavior. A thin shower gel moves quickly inside the bottle and reacts more obviously to squeezing or suitcase pressure. A thicker body lotion moves more slowly and may require more hand force to dispense. Shampoo often sits between these behaviors depending on surfactant level and viscosity.<\/p>\n<p>Le <strong>PE bottle body<\/strong> is appropriate for this kind of portable squeeze packaging because polyethylene is flexible compared with more rigid plastics. Its chain structure allows the bottle wall to deform under hand pressure and return toward shape after dispensing. The <strong>PP flip top cap<\/strong> contributes a separate functional role: it creates a controlled opening and supports one-handed use. The bottle body and cap should therefore be judged as a paired system, not as isolated parts.<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" alt=\"Portable personal care packaging scenario for refillable travel lotion bottles used in hotel and travel toiletry kits\" src=\"https:\/\/goldensoarpackage.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/08\/Lotion-Bottle-with-Pump.jpg\" \/><\/p>\n<p>A useful edge-case model is a mixed toiletry pouch test. Imagine one 120ml PE bottle filled with shampoo, one 150ml PE bottle filled with shower gel, and one 120ml PE bottle filled with body lotion. The pouch is carried through three stages: dry packing at room conditions, humid bathroom exposure after first use, and compressed return packing after the bottle surface becomes slightly wet. During the initial stage, the buyer mainly observes fit, label orientation, and cap accessibility. During the middle stage, grip comfort and wet-hand handling become more relevant. During the compressed stage, the buyer checks whether the filled bottle format still feels controlled and whether the cap remains suitable for travel storage.<\/p>\n<p>A cross-dimensional comparison helps clarify the value of scenario screening. In a retail travel set, a slightly larger 150ml bottle may improve perceived value, while in a compact airline-style toiletry pouch, the shorter 120ml format may support better packing density. In hotel amenity distribution, size consistency across rooms may matter more than maximum capacity. In outdoor kits, bottle resilience and hand usability may matter more than shelf display. The same PE and PP material pairing can serve all these channels, but the buyer\u2019s specification should reflect the actual use path.<\/p>\n<h2>Weight-to-Volume Mapping for Travel Lotion Bottles: Reading Practicality from 13.3g, 15.3g, and the 6.8g Flip Top Lid<\/h2>\n<p>Weight-to-volume mapping is a practical way to understand portability without reducing the product to a simple \u201clightweight\u201d claim. The specified component weights are <strong>Couvercle : 6.8g<\/strong>, <strong>Flacon de 120 ml : 13,3 g<\/strong>, et <strong>Flacon de 150 ml : 15,3 g<\/strong>. The dimensional data adds another layer: <strong>Lid specification: 22<em>35<\/em>35mm<\/strong>, <strong>120ml bottle specification: 109<em>48<\/em>48mm<\/strong>, et <strong>150ml bottle specification: 128<em>48<\/em>48mm<\/strong>.<\/p>\n<p>These numbers show how the format changes when capacity increases. The 150ml bottle is taller than the 120ml bottle, while both listed bottle footprints share the <strong>48*48mm<\/strong> base dimension. That means the size increase is primarily height-driven rather than width-driven. For buyers planning multi-bottle kits, this can influence tray height, pouch depth, carton layout, and retail set appearance. A height-driven capacity increase can be efficient when the packaging system has vertical space available. It can be less efficient when the bottle must sit inside a shallow pouch or rigid kit box.<\/p>\n<table>\n<thead>\n<tr>\n<th>Format element<\/th>\n<th style=\"text-align: right;\">Catalog data<\/th>\n<th>Procurement meaning<\/th>\n<th>Scenario implication<\/th>\n<\/tr>\n<\/thead>\n<tbody>\n<tr>\n<td>PP flip top lid<\/td>\n<td style=\"text-align: right;\">6.8g; 22<em>35<\/em>35mm<\/td>\n<td>Defines closure mass and handling point<\/td>\n<td>Affects cap feel and top-heavy perception<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td>120ml PE bottle<\/td>\n<td style=\"text-align: right;\">13.3g; 109<em>48<\/em>48mm<\/td>\n<td>Compact bottle body for smaller sets<\/td>\n<td>Useful for hotel amenities and short trips<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td>150ml PE bottle<\/td>\n<td style=\"text-align: right;\">15.3g; 128<em>48<\/em>48mm<\/td>\n<td>Higher volume with same listed footprint<\/td>\n<td>Useful for longer travel or larger refill kits<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Full capacity difference<\/td>\n<td style=\"text-align: right;\">131ml vs 163ml<\/td>\n<td>Indicates physical volume boundary<\/td>\n<td>Supports controlled matching to liquid category<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Application range<\/td>\n<td style=\"text-align: right;\">Shower gel, shampoo, body lotion<\/td>\n<td>Confirms personal-care use focus<\/td>\n<td>Helps avoid irrelevant container selection<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n<p>From a material perspective, PE behaves as a semi-crystalline polymer. Its flexible character comes from molecular mobility within amorphous regions and load distribution across crystalline zones. In a travel bottle, this matters because squeezing is not just a user gesture; it is a repeated mechanical event. A very rigid bottle can frustrate lotion dispensing. A very soft bottle can feel unstable in luggage or during repeated handling. The listed weights suggest a lightweight travel format, so buyers should treat handling trials as part of the selection process.<\/p>\n<p>A useful extreme-pressure timeline model begins with a fully packed toiletry bag. In the initial phase, the bottles experience short compression events from packing. The PE wall flexes, the PP cap remains the main rigid interface, and the user notices whether the bottle is easy to hold. In the middle phase, after several refill and use cycles, localized stress may concentrate near corners, shoulders, or the neck area because those zones experience repeated squeezing and handling. In the limit phase, if the bottle is overfilled, stored under pressure, or matched with a liquid that changes flow under temperature variation, the dispensing experience may become inconsistent even before a visible failure appears.<\/p>\n<p>The overlooked secondary effect is set imbalance. If a brand combines 120ml and 150ml bottles without checking height alignment and kit geometry, the set may look uneven, occupy more shipping space, or create pressure points inside a pouch. The issue is not only bottle durability. It is the interaction between bottle mass, volume, height, closure position, and the surrounding package system.<\/p>\n<div class=\"ui-takeaway-box\">\n<h3>KEY TAKEAWAYS<\/h3>\n<ul>\n<li>A height-driven size increase from <strong>109mm<\/strong> \u00e0 <strong>128mm<\/strong> can change pouch fit even when the listed base remains <strong>48*48mm<\/strong>.<\/li>\n<li>A <strong>6.8g PP flip top lid<\/strong> should be evaluated as part of the bottle\u2019s handling balance, not only as a closure.<\/li>\n<li>Early warning signs include uneven kit alignment, difficult dispensing with thicker lotion, and pressure concentration when bottles are packed tightly.\n<\/div>\n<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<h2>Refill Routine as a Procurement Signal: How Reusable PE Bottles Change Private-Label Toiletry Planning<\/h2>\n<p>Refill behavior is often treated as a consumer convenience feature, but for procurement teams it is also a signal of how the bottle supports repeat use, brand visibility, and product-line planning. The catalog identifies these bottles as <strong>refillable<\/strong>, <strong>reusable<\/strong>, and available for <strong>OEM\/ODM<\/strong> avec <strong>custom logo, packaging, and color<\/strong>. It also references optional finish directions such as <strong>matte, glossy, or frosted bottle finishes<\/strong>, plus bottle and cap color customization.<\/p>\n<p>This matters because private-label travel packaging is rarely purchased as a single isolated item. A brand may need shampoo, conditioner, body lotion, shower gel, and skincare products in coordinated packaging. If the bottle format supports custom color and logo treatment, it can carry a unified identity across different formulas. Yet the bottle still has to remain practical: a 120ml bottle may suit a compact lotion, while a 150ml bottle may better fit shower gel or shampoo for longer use periods.<\/p>\n<p>The factory-level logic is to keep the functional structure stable while allowing controlled customization. The <strong>PE body<\/strong> provides the squeezable reservoir. The <strong>PP flip top cap<\/strong> provides the closure and dispensing interface. The customization layer then modifies color, surface feel, logo method, or packaging presentation. A buyer should not let visual customization override practical handling tests. Matte, glossy, and frosted effects can change perceived grip, shelf look, and residue visibility, but the physical bottle still has to pass refill and dispensing review for the intended liquid.<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" alt=\"Private label packaging planning for custom travel lotion bottles with coordinated cosmetic refill formats\" src=\"https:\/\/goldensoarpackage.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/08\/Shower-Gel-Bottle-Wholesale.jpg\" \/><\/p>\n<p>A refill-cycle edge scenario can be modeled around three users: a hotel operations team refilling amenity kits, a beauty brand preparing promotional travel sets, and a consumer refilling bottles for repeated trips. In the initial phase, the bottle must be easy to fill and identify. In the mid-cycle phase, the cap must remain intuitive and the bottle body must still dispense without awkward force. In the extended-use phase, the brand must consider whether color, label, or surface finish still communicates product identity after exposure to bathroom humidity, wet hands, and cosmetic residue.<\/p>\n<p>A cross-test case compares three packaging strategies. Strategy one uses plain unbranded bottles, which may reduce design complexity but offers weak shelf distinction. Strategy two uses color-coded PE bottles, which improves product separation across shampoo, shower gel, and body lotion. Strategy three combines color, logo, and a coordinated kit layout, which creates stronger brand recognition but requires more disciplined approval of artwork, color matching, and packaging assembly. The catalog supports custom logo, packaging, and color, but the buyer still needs to specify acceptance criteria before mass production.<\/p>\n<p>Internal linking can help readers move across related packaging formats without confusing product intent. Buyers comparing refill systems can review <a href=\"https:\/\/goldensoarpackage.com\/fr\/systeme-de-flacons-de-recharge-flacons-pompes-airless\/\">refill bottle system options with airless pump bottles<\/a>. Teams sourcing personal care dispensers may also compare <a href=\"https:\/\/goldensoarpackage.com\/fr\/flacon-de-dentifrice-flacons-vides-de-savon-pour-les-mains\/\">toothpaste and hand soap bottle formats<\/a>. For spray packaging differentiation, the related <a href=\"https:\/\/goldensoarpackage.com\/fr\/flacons-pulverisateurs-en-aluminium-flacons-de-parfum-vides\/\">aluminum spray bottles and empty perfume bottles<\/a> page provides a separate material and application direction.<\/p>\n<h2>Pre-Shipment Reality Checks: Turning ISO 9001:2015 and ASTM-D1693 into Buyer-Facing Confidence<\/h2>\n<p>Pre-shipment evaluation converts catalog specifications into commercial trust. The provided product context references <strong>ISO 9001:2015<\/strong>, <strong>ASTM-D1693 Standard<\/strong>, <strong>15-25 Days Lead Time<\/strong>, et <strong>MOQ: 10,000 Units<\/strong>. These data points do not replace buyer-side inspection, but they help define a more disciplined procurement conversation.<\/p>\n<p>ISO 9001:2015 is a quality management system standard, not a product-specific guarantee. It is relevant because it signals that the supplier should have structured procedures for documentation, process control, corrective action, and customer requirements. ASTM D1693 is associated with environmental stress-cracking resistance testing for polyethylene materials. For PE travel bottles used with shampoo, shower gel, and body lotion, stress-cracking logic is relevant because surfactant-based liquids and repeated mechanical handling can expose weak points over time. Buyers can learn more about the general role of standards through <a href=\"https:\/\/www.astm.org\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">ASTM International<\/a> and quality management principles through the <a href=\"https:\/\/www.iso.org\/iso-9001-quality-management.html\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">International Organization for Standardization<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>A cautious QC plan should separate catalog facts from reasonable category testing. The catalog context supports strict quality control and leak-proof, easy-to-squeeze, travel-ready positioning. Reasonable QC for this product category may include cap fit inspection, leak-proof testing after filling simulation, flip-top opening and closing review, dimensional inspection for lid and bottle, weight consistency check, printing or surface inspection, and compatibility review using shampoo, shower gel, body lotion, and skincare liquids. These should be written into the purchase agreement or sample approval checklist rather than assumed.<\/p>\n<p>Execution Protocol 1: Dimensional verification should begin with the listed cap and bottle measurements. Inspectors should check the <strong>22<em>35<\/em>35mm<\/strong> lid specification, <strong>109<em>48<\/em>48mm<\/strong> 120ml bottle specification, and <strong>128<em>48<\/em>48mm<\/strong> 150ml bottle specification against approved samples. The goal is not to over-engineer a small bottle. The goal is to prevent small deviations from accumulating across cap assembly, carton layout, pouch packing, and user handling.<\/p>\n<p>Expected material behavior: When dimensional control is stable, the PE body and PP flip top cap interact more predictably during normal squeezing and storage. The buyer should see fewer variations in perceived cap fit, bottle stance, and set alignment.<\/p>\n<p>Hidden cost and risk control: Tighter dimensional checks can slow inspection if the sampling plan is unclear. To avoid delay, buyers should define critical dimensions, acceptable variation bands, and sample size before production.<\/p>\n<p>Execution Protocol 2: Weight consistency review should check the <strong>6.8g lid<\/strong>, <strong>13.3g 120ml bottle<\/strong>, et <strong>15.3g 150ml bottle<\/strong> against approved production samples. Weight is not only a cost variable. It also indicates whether the bottle may feel unusually light, unusually stiff, or inconsistent across a batch.<\/p>\n<p>Expected material behavior: Stable component weight supports consistent squeeze feel and better kit uniformity. It also helps buyers identify unexpected material reduction before it becomes a field complaint.<\/p>\n<p>Hidden cost and risk control: Weight control alone does not prove performance. It must be paired with handling, filling, and closure checks.<\/p>\n<p>Execution Protocol 3: Filling simulation should use representative liquids from the stated application range: shower gel, shampoo, and body lotion. Each formula type should be filled, handled, inverted, squeezed, and stored in a simulated travel pouch.<\/p>\n<p>Expected material behavior: Thin liquids reveal closure weakness faster, while thicker lotions reveal dispensing resistance and hand-force issues. This lets the buyer evaluate both containment and usability.<\/p>\n<p>Hidden cost and risk control: Testing too many formulas can delay approval. Buyers should choose the highest-risk formula types from their actual product line.<\/p>\n<p>Execution Protocol 4: Branding and surface review should evaluate custom logo, packaging, color, and finish approval under real handling conditions. Matte, glossy, and frosted effects should be checked for visual fit, residue visibility, and kit consistency.<\/p>\n<p>Expected material behavior: The bottle remains a functional PE container, but the surface presentation becomes a brand signal. Good approval discipline helps avoid mismatch between visual identity and use environment.<\/p>\n<p>Hidden cost and risk control: Over-customization may increase approval time. Buyers should lock color references, logo placement, and packaging layout before bulk order confirmation.<\/p>\n<table>\n<thead>\n<tr>\n<th>Inspection area<\/th>\n<th>Relevant data point<\/th>\n<th>General test basis<\/th>\n<th>Buyer decision value<\/th>\n<\/tr>\n<\/thead>\n<tbody>\n<tr>\n<td>Material pairing<\/td>\n<td>PE body + PP flip top cap<\/td>\n<td>Material and closure compatibility review<\/td>\n<td>Confirms the bottle is treated as a system<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Capacity format<\/td>\n<td>131ml and 163ml full capacity<\/td>\n<td>Filling simulation by liquid type<\/td>\n<td>Supports correct product-set planning<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Component weight<\/td>\n<td>6.8g, 13.3g, 15.3g<\/td>\n<td>Weight consistency sampling<\/td>\n<td>Detects unexpected production variation<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Dimensions<\/td>\n<td>22<em>35<\/em>35mm; 109<em>48<\/em>48mm; 128<em>48<\/em>48mm<\/td>\n<td>Dimensional inspection<\/td>\n<td>Protects pouch fit and kit layout<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Quality context<\/td>\n<td>ISO 9001:2015; ASTM-D1693 Standard<\/td>\n<td>Management and PE stress-cracking relevance<\/td>\n<td>Builds evidence for supplier screening<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Supply planning<\/td>\n<td>15-25 Days Lead Time; MOQ 10,000 Units<\/td>\n<td>Procurement scheduling review<\/td>\n<td>Helps align launch timing and inventory<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" alt=\"Factory quality review workflow for bulk cosmetic packaging and refillable travel lotion bottles before shipment\" src=\"https:\/\/goldensoarpackage.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/08\/aluminum-spray-bottles.jpg\" \/><\/p>\n<div class=\"ui-blue-box\">\n<h3>PRO-TIP \/ CHECKLIST<\/h3>\n<ol>\n<li>Confirm whether the project needs the <strong>120ml<\/strong> format, the <strong>150ml<\/strong> format, or both.<\/li>\n<li>Check full capacity values separately from nominal selling size.<\/li>\n<li>Test shampoo, shower gel, and body lotion because each liquid moves differently in PE squeeze packaging.<\/li>\n<li>Inspect the <strong>6.8g PP flip top lid<\/strong> together with the bottle body, not as a separate accessory only.<\/li>\n<li>Verify bottle dimensions against pouch, carton, and kit layout before bulk production.<\/li>\n<li>Define logo, color, packaging, and finish approvals before the final purchase order.<\/li>\n<li>Treat ISO 9001:2015 and ASTM-D1693 as support signals, then still run application-specific sampling.<\/li>\n<li>Record lead time and MOQ impact early so packaging approval does not delay launch planning.\n<\/div>\n<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<h2>Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)<\/h2>\n<h3 class=\"faq-question\">Is it safe to reuse food packaging materials?<\/h3>\n<p>Food packaging reuse depends on the original material, prior contact substance, cleaning method, and intended refill content. For cosmetic travel lotion bottles, the safer approach is to use packaging specified for personal-care liquids such as shampoo, shower gel, and body lotion rather than repurposing unknown containers.<\/p>\n<h3 class=\"faq-question\">Is packaging material taxable in California?<\/h3>\n<p>Tax treatment can depend on the packaging type, buyer role, resale status, and use case. A packaging buyer should verify the current rule with California tax authorities or a qualified tax professional. Product material data alone does not determine tax status.<\/p>\n<h3 class=\"faq-question\">Are VCI packaging products made of recycled materials?<\/h3>\n<p>VCI packaging is a corrosion-inhibiting packaging category, while travel lotion bottles are personal-care dispensing containers. Some VCI packaging may use recycled content depending on the supplier and performance requirement, but that question should not be mixed with PE cosmetic bottle specifications unless the supplier documents it.<\/p>\n<h3 class=\"faq-question\">What makes PE useful for refillable travel lotion bottles?<\/h3>\n<p>PE is useful because it supports a squeezable bottle body that can dispense shampoo, shower gel, and body lotion in compact travel formats. In this product line, the PE body is paired with a PP flip top cap to support portable, refillable use.<\/p>\n<h3 class=\"faq-question\">Which size is better: 120ml or 150ml?<\/h3>\n<p>The 120ml bottle suits compact travel kits and short-use formats, while the 150ml bottle supports longer use or higher-volume personal-care products. The listed full capacities are <strong>131ml<\/strong> for the 120ml bottle and <strong>163ml<\/strong> for the 150ml bottle.<\/p>\n<\/div>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Travel Lotion Bottles Research Report Reference Standard: Relevant material and performance testing standards, including ASTM D1693 for environmental stress-cracking resistance of polyethylene materials and ISO 9001:2015 for quality management systems. Short Answer Travel lotion bottles for shampoo, shower gel, and body lotion should be evaluated by use scenario, not only by appearance or stated capacity. &#8230; <a title=\"Travel Lotion Bottles Research Report\" class=\"read-more\" href=\"https:\/\/goldensoarpackage.com\/fr\/travel-lotion-bottles-research\/\" aria-label=\"En savoir plus sur Travel Lotion Bottles Research Report\">Lire la suite<\/a><\/p>","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"","ping_status":"","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[16],"tags":[161,403,146],"class_list":["post-10204","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-pe-packaging","tag-cosmetic-packaging","tag-oem-bottles","tag-pe-bottles"],"acf":{"raw_html_content":""},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/goldensoarpackage.com\/fr\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/10204","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/goldensoarpackage.com\/fr\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/goldensoarpackage.com\/fr\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/goldensoarpackage.com\/fr\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/goldensoarpackage.com\/fr\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=10204"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/goldensoarpackage.com\/fr\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/10204\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/goldensoarpackage.com\/fr\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=10204"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/goldensoarpackage.com\/fr\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=10204"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/goldensoarpackage.com\/fr\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=10204"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}