Sourcing Snapshot
This page helps retail brands, online sellers, distributors, and private-label buyers evaluate private label curtains packaging guide for B2B buyers by comparing label files, barcode rules, insert cards, carton marks, packaging samples, and packing records.
Use it to prepare a clearer RFQ, request matching samples, and compare supplier evidence before bulk production.
Private Label Curtains: Packaging, Labels, and Retail-Ready Specs
Private Label Guide | 05/10/2026
Private label curtain programs need more than a good fabric and a finished size. Buyers also need clear packaging artwork, product labels, barcode rules, carton marks, and sample approval records so the product can move smoothly from factory to warehouse, retail shelf, or e-commerce fulfillment center.
1. Confirm the Product Specification First
Packaging should follow the product. Confirm fabric composition, finished size, panel quantity, header style, lining, color name, care instructions, and country-specific labeling needs before designing labels or printed inserts.
2. Choose the Right Label System
Most private label curtain orders use a combination of sewn labels, hangtags, stickers, and carton marks. A sewn brand label is useful for long-term identity, while hangtags and stickers carry size, color, barcode, and selling-point information.
- Woven or satin label: usually sewn into the side seam or top header area.
- Hangtag: useful for retail display, care notes, and product story.
- Barcode sticker: should match the buyer's warehouse, marketplace, or retail system.
3. Match Packaging to the Sales Channel
E-commerce brands often prefer compact polybags, barcode labels, and clear size identification. Retail buyers may need insert cards, hanger holes, display-friendly folding, and stronger shelf presentation. Project buyers usually care more about room number labels, carton marks, and installation sequence.
4. Prepare Artwork Files Clearly
Send editable artwork files when possible, with Pantone or CMYK color references, font outlines, dimensions, and placement instructions. If the factory needs to create a layout from scratch, provide brand logo files, copy, barcode numbers, warning text, and sample photos of the expected style.
5. Approve Packaging Samples Before Bulk Production
A packaging sample should confirm the bag size, label placement, folding method, insert card position, barcode readability, carton strength, and outer carton mark. Photos are helpful, but buyers should keep the physical sample or a sealed approval record for production reference.
6. Keep Cartons Practical for Shipping
Oversized cartons may look convenient during packing but can increase shipping cost and warehouse handling risk. Confirm carton quantity, gross weight, carton size, shipping marks, and pallet needs before production starts.
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