Some packaging solutions are designed around a single product. This one is designed around a system. Built on a public mould base, this molded pulp essential oil box separates structure from surface: the tray shape stays fixed and cost-efficient, while the tote, the sleeve, and the interior lining are each fully open to customization. What emerges is less a single box than a modular kit that different botanical and fragrance brands can dress in entirely different identities.
A Public Mould Foundation with Room to Brand
The pulp tray itself is a shared, tooling-light foundation, which keeps unit cost and lead time down for smaller order volumes. But the surface is where individuality returns. On the outer case, the "GREEN VALLEY" mark is pressed directly into the fiber as a debossed wordmark, and a botanical lily illustration is layered over it in matte navy ink, giving the raw, undyed pulp a quiet, editorial finish rather than a printed, glossy one.

The Kraft Tote as the First Impression
Before the box is even opened, the accompanying kraft-toned paper tote carries the same lily line-art motif in cobalt blue against an off-white ground, with sturdy blue cotton rope handles. It sets the palette before the product is unwrapped and reinforces that even the transport layer of a fragrance shipment can be treated as brand real estate, not an afterthought.

Sleeve Systems: From Kraft Wrap to Elastic Cord
The outer sleeve is where this solution shows the most flexibility. The same tray can be dressed in a coated-paper wrap-band with foil-stamped copy, closed with a slim elastic cord, tied shut with waxed cotton twine in a simple bow, or fastened with a printed hang tag threaded through the fiber. Kraft paper, glassine, coated art paper, elastic band, cotton cord, and paper rope are all available as sleeve materials, so a single mould can carry the visual language of a minimalist apothecary line or a more ornamental botanical brand without any change to the underlying structure.

Interior Linings Built Around the Bottle
Inside, a precision-molded cavity cradles the dropper bottle so it sits still in transit, while a coordinating drawstring pouch in canvas, silk, or a biodegradable wood-fiber or bamboo-fiber nonwoven gives the bottle a soft, textile layer before it ever touches the pulp tray. Brands sourcing for organic or wildcrafted oils can move away from synthetic satin pouches entirely and stay compostable from the bottle out.

One Mould, Many Brand Stories
Laid out in a flat grid, the range of closures reads almost like a materials library rather than a single SKU: ribbon-wrapped, twine-tied, tag-hung, and band-wrapped versions of the same tray sit side by side, each one visually distinct. That is the real value of a public mould essential oil box like this: it gives smaller and mid-size botanical, aromatherapy, and perfume brands a structurally proven, protective format, and then lets the tote, sleeve, and lining choices carry the brand's own story on top of it.