Jump to content

700ml bottle suppliers


Recommended Posts

  • 4 weeks later...

We are seeking glass suppliers for 700ml bottles for export. Would like to be able to purchase in pallets rather than containers. Curious who others are using.

Thanks,

Todd

Striped Pig Distillery

Hey Todd,

We are placing an order for these with a European supplier and hope to have stock in the next two months. Please let me know what style you have in mind? We will be stocking these in Richmond, VA.

Cheers,

Shawn

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 3 weeks later...

We may be able to help you. With a custom bottle, you can differentiate your brand on shelf by having a unique bottle shape and embossing a logo, name, or design into the glass. Please contact me for your glass bottle requirements. A typical 750ml super flint glass bottle costs about $1.25 DDU via ocean freight to a USA location.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 3 months later...

We can make a custom 700ml and 500ml mold for only $1500. At no extra cost, we can emboss your company logo, name, or design into the glass. Made in China. Call me at 561.818.8977 to discuss the details.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 3 weeks later...

We can make a custom 700ml and 500ml mold for only $1500. At no extra cost, we can emboss your company logo, name, or design into the glass. Made in China. Call me at 561.818.8977 to discuss the details.

How do I get prices on some of the bottles that are pictured on your website?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

700 ml is not an authorized size. The authorized sizes are:

§5.47a Metric standards of fill (distilled spirits bottled after December 31, 1979).
(a) Authorized standards of fill. The standards of fill for distilled spirits are the following:

(1) For containers other than cans described in paragraph (a)(2), of this section—

1.75 liters

1.00 liter

750 milliliters

500 milliliters (Authorized for bottling until June 30, 1989)

375 milliliters

200 milliliters

100 milliliters

50 milliliters

(2) For metal containers which have the general shape and design of a can, which have a closure which is an integral part of the container, and which cannot be readily reclosed after opening—

355 milliliters

200 milliliters

100 milliliters

50 milliliters

If you find spirits in 700 ml bottles, say Cutty Sark Scotch, it is likely a gray market or counterfeit product (there is difference) entered into commerce outside of the channels generally occupied by the sole authorized US agent and taking advantage of price differences in say an FTZ in Cypress and the importers price in the US. Anyway, you don't want 700 ML (or 70 CL bottles) on goods you want to market here.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 4 weeks later...

I'd check to make sure that the 750 ml bottles for 700 ml labels, when filled, meet the headspace requirements of the country to which you are exporting. The last thing you want is to have a pallet you've shipped to Tuva for the throat singing festival rejected at the border because you've got too much headspace in the bottle. TTB can help with this. Contact the International Affairs Division by phone at (202) 453-2260, or by email at exportcertificates@ttb.gov and ask them whether Tuva has headspace regulations. They are there to help.

Do such regulations exist. Yup. We've got them right here in the USA. Although part 5 does not apply to products bottled for export (I missed the fact that the 700 ml bottles were meant for export when I first responded to this thread and got my comeuppance from 3dOg), the US has regulations on headspace:

§ 5.46 Standard liquor bottles.
(a) General. A standard liquor bottle shall be one so made and formed, and so filled, as not to mislead the purchaser. An individual carton or other container of a bottle shall not be so designed as to mislead purchasers as to the size of the bottles.
(b ) Headspace. A liquor bottle of a capacity of 200 milliliters or more shall be held to be so filled as to mislead the purchaser if it has a headspace in excess of 8 percent of the total capacity of the bottle after closure.

(c ) Design. A liquor bottle shall be held (irrespective of the correctness of the stated net contents) to be so made and formed as to mislead the purchaser, if its actual capacity is substantially less than the capacity it appears to have upon visual examination under ordinary conditions of purchase or use.

I'm not saying that Tuva has such standards, but it might. I'm not saying Tuva would enforce the standards if it had them. But it might. I do know that some countries can be tough on imports,so it would be nice to know going in the comeuppance you might be inviting. As the saying goes, "just sayin'..."

.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yes, because the US standard is 8%, but the Tuva standard could be different. I'll make a general statement. If you are going to export to any other country, ask TTB what that country requires.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 1 month later...

Todd,

We can produce a custom 700ml or 500ml bottle for you. MOQ is 10,000 bottles. One time mold cost is about $2500 and the piece price is about $1.50 delivered to a USA address. Call me at 561.818.8977 to discuss.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 1 year later...

When you are ready again, Pavisa entered a technology and marketing agreement this year with Allied Glass in the UK.  Since the market they serve has 700ml as standard they have an extensive stock line offering at www.allied-glass.com.

Shipping in full containers would be great, but if you know what you want and how many and we can plan for it, we will just make sure we have what you need in a container with a mix of other items we plan to bring and store in the US to help balance out the Pavisa Glass stock line.

We plan to store the glass at up to 3 locations using our recent partnership with the premium decorator Quest Industries to help us service the craft market through their decorating plants in Kentucky and California, but a Pavisa facility in New England.

Call when ready.

 

Brooke

Pavisa Glass

www.pavisaglass.com

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...