Mixer bottle shapes up

Cocktail mixer bottles take new shape in pinch-grip PET. Also new are a gold hot-stamped, pressure-sensitive label and HDPE closure.

Following a liquor-bottle trend, American Beverage Marketers switched its Master of Mixes cocktail mix bottles from glass to pi
Following a liquor-bottle trend, American Beverage Marketers switched its Master of Mixes cocktail mix bottles from glass to pi

American Beverage Marketers has for years been a forerunner when it comes to bottle design and filling techniques. Its new pinch-grip plastic beverage bottle isn't revolutionary, but is part of a trend to provide consumer convenience. In January, the New Albany, IN, firm moved away from glass to a shapelier and lighter bottle made of polyethylene terephthalate for its Master® of Mixes line. The bottles also received a label redesign and a new closure.

The five flavors of 1.75-L cocktail mixers have an 18-month shelf life, slightly less than the previous glass bottle, and retail for less than $6.

"When you get to big sizes like what we're using, glass is difficult because it's so heavy," says George Wagner, president of ABM. The new PET bottle weighs just 85 g, 723 g less than the glass version it replaced.

The stock pinch-grip PET bottle is injection/stretch blow-molded by Pretium Packaging (Hermann, MO). "Pinch-grip is standard in the liquor industry, and we are in the liquor industry in an indirect way," Wagner says. "We sell in liquor stores, and you mix our product with liquor."

With the exception of the redesigned Bloody Mary mixes, the new front label uses the same graphics as did the previous one, but the paper moved up to 50# semigloss with a UV coating from Avery Dennison's Fasson Div. (Painesville, OH). Another change: The label is now pressure-sensitive rather than hot-glue-applied because the speeds of application are much quicker with p-s labels. It's printed in seven or eight colors by The Stratus Group (Hamilton, OH) via a process Stratus calls a "hybrid" of flexography and rotary letterpress. This printing process involves a unique print station in which Stratus uses an ink viscosity similar to rotary letterpress and an anilox roll similar to what is used in flexography.

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