Cubes – Soft Plastic
The soft plastic cube works as a branded confectionery item for a reason rigid containers don't match. The fill is completely visible on all six sides. Every angle of a clear PVC cube shows what's inside, which means the product does its own visual selling. Jelly beans in bright colours, chewy mints in white, chocolate gems in mixed tones, or the branded red of Skittles, each fill has its own colour character that reads immediately through the transparent walls. The distinction between this category and the hard plastic cubes on the site is the material. Soft PVC flexes slightly under pressure, which makes the lid easier to remove and gives the cube a more tactile, less clinical feel than a rigid container. The range here covers fills including jelly beans in mixed or corporate colours, chewy mints at 60g and 110g, acid drops, chocolate gems, chocolate malt balls, choc beans, Mentos, and Skittles, in small cubes around 50–60g and large cubes at 110g. An 800g PVC mint box covers the reception counter and self-serve end. Most items carry the Australian Made badge. Minimums start from 50 units across most styles.
A small 60g jelly bean cube branded for a product launch is compact enough to include in a delegate bag but substantial enough to sit on a desk for the week that follows. In both positions the sticker faces outward and the brand is in the room.
The sticker goes on one flat face of the cube. Simple, high-contrast artwork reads best given the colourful fill visible behind it.
Technical & Compliance
What is the difference between soft and hard plastic cubes?
Soft plastic cubes use a pliable PVC construction that flexes slightly when squeezed. This makes the lid easier to remove and press back on and gives the container a tactile quality. Hard plastic cubes use a rigid acrylic or plastic construction that doesn't flex. Hard cubes tend to be used for premium or longer-term desk items; soft PVC cubes are more common for event giveaways and general promotional use. Both are clear on all sides and display the fill. The distinction is primarily in feel and perceived durability rather than visual appearance.
Is the PVC food safe?
Soft PVC is used across the food packaging industry in Australia and the cubes in this range are food-grade containers that comply with relevant food contact material requirements. The confectionery fill inside each cube is an Australian Made product produced to Australian food safety requirements. Buyers with specific allergen or dietary requirements should check the individual product page for ingredient information before ordering.
How is the sticker applied and positioned?
A single sticker is applied to one flat face of the cube. The sticker carries the buyer's artwork, including logo, name, contact details, or event branding, and is applied before dispatch. Because the cube's other five sides are fully transparent, the fill colour is always visible alongside the sticker, which affects how the sticker artwork reads. High-contrast designs with clear backgrounds work best. Dark text on a white or light background reads cleanly against most fills.
What fills are available in Australian Made versions?
Nearly all fills in this range are Australian Made, including jelly beans, chewy mints, acid drops, chocolate gems, chocolate malt balls, and choc beans are all produced domestically. Mentos and Skittles are branded products from international manufacturers. The Australian Made badge is shown on the individual product pages for styles where the fill is domestically produced, which allows buyers who need to verify Australian Made provenance to confirm the specific style before ordering.