Quality Control

The cheapest defect is the one you catch before it ships

Incoming material, in-process and final checks — measured against the sample you approved, not a vague standard.

Baş Packaging quality control inspecting finished custom packaging against the approved sample

Quality control is not a stamp you add at the end; it is a series of small refusals along the way. The board that arrived slightly off-spec, the print that drifted half a shade, the glue line that did not cure — each is a chance to stop a problem while it is still cheap to fix. The most expensive defect is always the one that reaches your filling line.

It starts with what comes in

Most packaging faults are inherited, not created. We check incoming board and materials against spec before they ever reach a press, because a weakness in the raw material becomes a weakness in every box made from it. Catching it at the door is far cheaper than catching it on your pallet.

Measured against the sample you approved

We do not check against a vague idea of "good"; we check against the exact sample you signed off — its dimensions, its colour, its structure, its print registration. That approved sample is the contract, and every run is held to it. If a detail matters to you, it goes on the checklist.

Random sampling, on purpose

Inspecting every single unit would be slow and, oddly, less reliable than disciplined sampling. We pull samples at set points across a run, so a drift shows up while there is still time to correct it — not in a complaint three weeks later. Food-contact packs get the extra checks their use demands.

If something is wrong, you hear it from us first

We would rather flag a problem and hold a shipment than let a flawed run leave and hope it passes. Every batch is traceable, so when a question comes up we answer it with a record, not a guess. Honesty here costs us a little in the short term and saves everyone a great deal later.

Frequently Asked Questions

What do you actually check?
Dimensions, colour, print registration, structural integrity, glue and seams, and food-contact suitability — all measured against the sample you approved.
Do you inspect every unit or sample?
Disciplined random sampling at set points across the run. It catches drift faster and more reliably than 100% inspection, with extra checks for food-contact packs.
What happens if a batch fails a check?
We hold it rather than ship it, trace the cause through our records, and correct it before it reaches you — a held shipment is cheaper than a recall.
Can you provide quality documentation for our audits?
Yes. Batches are traceable and we keep the records your own quality and compliance audits need, so a question can be answered with a document rather than a guess.

Tell us about your packaging

Send us your current pack and what it has to do. We will come back with options — and a quote within 24 hours.