Plastic Flip Top
Plastic flip top containers solve the portability problem that most branded confectionery can't. A cello bag spills if it opens. A glass jar doesn't fit in a pocket. A pillow box goes flat in a bag. A flip top case closes securely, opens one-handed, and is designed to live in a pocket or a bag for days. The hinged lid is the defining feature. It opens with a thumb press and closes firmly, which keeps the fill fresh and contained through travel, a conference, or a commute. The range covers two size tiers. At 35g, the containers hold jelly beans, mints, chewy fruits, M&Ms, or Skittles, each sealed in a coloured case that can be chosen to match the brand palette from a selection of red, yellow, green, blue, black, and white. At 20g, mini jelly beans in single colour or mixed, mini mints, and mini M&Ms offer a slightly smaller, more compact option at a higher unit cost. All styles start from 100 units and most carry the Australian Made badge. The flip top case is the format most often cited for airline, travel, and in-transit use. Its sealed construction makes it well suited to a context where loose confectionery creates mess.
A real estate agency placing branded flip top cases at an open home gets a giveaway that travels. The case goes into the visitor's pocket at the door and stays there for the rest of the day.
The sticker goes on the front face of the closed container, visible while the case is in hand, on a desk, or in a bag side pocket without the case needing to be opened.
Buyer Scenarios
What would a travel agency order flip top cases for?
Travel agencies are the most noted context for this format in the range. A branded flip top case in the agency's colours, filled with mints, given to clients at booking confirmation or included in a travel pack, ties the brand to a positive moment at the start of a trip. The case is sealed for hygiene, compact enough to go into a travel bag without bulk, and reusable after the fill is consumed. Mints are the preferred fill for a travel context given their practical function on a flight or long-distance journey.
Are these a good option for a school or charity fundraiser?
Yes, the 35g jelly bean or chewy fruit container at 100 units minimum and a price accessible to school committees and small charities is well suited to a fundraiser. Branded with the school or charity name, the container raises awareness and funds at the same time. The compact size makes it easy to sell at a stall, include in a showbag, or distribute at an event gate without logistics complications. Jelly beans and chewy fruits are the most popular fills for a children-friendly fundraiser context.
Can I order different fills within the same campaign?
Each fill is a separate product with its own quantity threshold of 100 units. A campaign combining jelly beans for a trade show table and mints for a VIP gift bag orders them as separate lines. The sticker artwork can be consistent across both, so the brand presentation is coherent even though the fills differ. For an event with both a general audience and a targeted VIP component, using two fills with the same sticker is a practical way to tier the giveaway.
Which case colour works best for a corporate brand?
Black and white are the most versatile for a corporate context. They work cleanly with most sticker colour combinations and read as professional rather than playful. Red suits a brand with red as a primary colour. Blue and green suit brands in those colour families. Yellow is the most energetic and casual option, suited to a brand with a fun, accessible personality. The case colour should complement the sticker rather than compete with it. Matching or closely aligning the case colour with the dominant brand colour gives the most co-ordinated result.