Radius brushes away excess costs

Shrink sleeve bundling system enables Radius to unitize plastic cases of its unusual toothbrushes in film sleeves rather than the more costly folding cartons it had used.

Six cased toothbrushes are bundled in a curtain of film formed from two separate webs.
Six cased toothbrushes are bundled in a curtain of film formed from two separate webs.

The Smithsonian Institution recently added an unusual toothbrush to the permanent collection at its Cooper Hewitt National Design Museum in New York. The product is designed with a wide left- or right-handed rubber grip handle and large, soft bristles that brush both teeth and gums simultaneously. Although it’s the toothbrush design that caught the attention of the museum, the brush’s packaging merits more than a brush-off.

Radius Corp. makes and packages its toothbrushes for both adults and children. It also produces children’s brushes under the Fisher-Price® brand. Sold through much of the U.S., the individual brushes are manually packed into two-piece injection-molded cases made in-house by the Kutztown, PA-based firm. The cases are then decorated with either pressure-sensitive or shrink-sleeve labels.

After labeling, a Damark Packaging Systems’ (Lewisville, TX) film sleeve wrapper collates either two, three or six cases, overwraps them in film, then sends the unitized pack into a shrink tunnel.

Six-packs are shipped to nearly all of the retail stores that carry the company’s toothbrushes. Three-packs are made exclusively for Target stores nationwide. The two-pack is used for promotions.

Film replaces cartons

Purchased about two years ago, the film bundle produced by the Damark system replaces the folding cartons Radius had used previously for its six-packs. “The cartons were beautifully printed, and they contained “slots” that held the individual brushes, but they were expensive,” recalls James O’Halloran. He and Kevin Foley co-founded the company in the early 1980s.

O’Halloran says, “The cartons were ideal for the health and nutrition stores we sell in, but they weren’t necessary in the general chain drug and grocery environment. They didn’t want them, and they threw them away.” That was especially vexing, O’Halloran says, considering “we were paying 35 cents for each carton. The shrink-sleeve bundling film costs us about one-third of a cent per [unit] pack.”

The co-owner estimates that two-thirds of its sales of one million brushes last year were six-packs. So that year’s savings from the switch to shrink-bundled film amounted to approximately $38ꯠ. This year O’Halloran forecasts sales of 1.3 million brushes.

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