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Plastic Containers, Tubs, Buckets & Boxes

Author: Liang

May. 06, 2024

2 0 0

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Plastic Containers, Tubs, Buckets & Boxes

Containers, Tubs, & Pots

From food, pharmaceutical or industrial use, our extensive ranges of containers, tubs and pots come in many designs, sizes and materials to meet your brand's requirements.

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Label for Conical Shape Container - Page 2

Icehall, and Vishnu,


I have been hindered since 24th September, and only just able to start catching up among other urgent matters.


This long outstanding question is the first one I have started on; I saw it in my Notification feed.


The following is in addition to the excellent explanation by Vishnu (I was unable to view the linked video).


I also believe that Vishnu can give you better help than I with some of the interpretation and guessing (as in step 3).


As mentioned earlier,


"Any adaptation of plane (or plain) artwork to conical surfaces is inherently an approximation with with inbuilt choices/inaccuracies/limits to usability.


Obviously, the usability of a simple adaptation depends on the nature and structure of the artwork, including the proportions and especially the width/height along the generating lines, where (further) customization may be needed."


This also applies to the Warp>Arc (or (Argh) way as mentioned, and besides there are countless ways of expressing the task, so this also applies to the present case "Your information is completely different to what I have ever seen in hitherto conical label cases".

 

There are a few things I find strange in the template:


The cutting line seems to have three rounded corners and one sharp (top right). I assume it is meant to be rounded as well.


The dotted line is 10 mm inside the cutting line at the top and 5mm inside at the bottom; to the right it seems to be (coinciding with the full line) 5 mm inside all the way from top to bottom, but it extends past the cutting line to the left. I assume it is meant to be 5 mm inside the cutting line in both sides. As a comment, when warping by the same (bending) angle, it is impossible to have the same distance inside from top to bottom, instead it will be more at the top and less at the bottom (how much depends on the angle), which will also make it look right. This raises the question whether the 5 mm inside is supposed to be the minimum or the average, I assume it is insignificant in this case.


No bleed/maximum artwork boundary seems to be present. I assume you will just have to add a bleed to have the artwork extend enough past the cutting line, based on information from the vendor or by a safe guess.


With the assumptions, you can try the following and see whether it looks right, see drawings below:


1) Create a (full) stroke/nofill rectangle corresponding to the cutting line with W = 144 mm and H = 104.9 mm, you can adjust the corners later;


To get the overall right proportions at the centre of the label (wider at the top and narrower at the bottom), rather than right at the bottom and (too much) wider towards the top, and corresponding to the actual (bent) length:


2) In the W box in Transform panel, increase the width of the rectangle to 180 mm (144 * 1.25);

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To get the dotted rectangle inside the full line rectangle for text and other crucial artwork with the size W = 170 mm and H = 89.9 mm;:


3a) Object>Path>Offset Path>Set the Offset to -5 mm, then

3b) Deselect, then with the Direct Selection Tool click the top side of the new rectangle and Obects/Transform>Move it down by -5 mm;

3c) Click Dashed Line in the Stroke panel;


4) Create the crucial artwork including text to best fit within the widened dotted rectangle from 3);


This is meant to look right as a basic rectangular version of the label, as you would want it on a cylindrical container; and then:


5) Select everything and bring the width back to 144 mm, then add non crucial artwork behind everything to fill the full stroke rectangle from 1);


Now you have a funny looking label with compressed (crucial) artwork and non crucial artwork contained within the rectangle that is going to form the cutting line;


Now it is time for the warping:


6) Group everything from 5), then apply Effect>Warp>Arc with a Bend of 20%;


This ought to fit (close enough) the label from the vendor which you can place on top as a stroked path, see basic shape shown to the right based on the vendor label drawing at the bottom.


Then you can:


7):
7a) Either hide the cutting line from 6), or hide the label from the vendor and round the corners of the cutting line from 6) and use that.
7b) Add the bleed with non crucial artwork behind everything.

 

 

 

 

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