A premium wellness pouch should be briefed around the products it must hold, not around an attractive exterior alone. For bottle-based kits, the construction route, lining, elastic positioning and filled-sample review need to be agreed before quotation.
Quick Buyer Summary
- Best fit: skincare, wellness, hotel amenity and recovery-kit buyers sourcing a padded custom pouch for bottles, jars or essential-oil packaging.
- Two proven construction directions: a neoprene pouch for a softer protective build, or a quilted PU pouch for a more structured premium appearance.
- Real lining route: 190D rPET laminated with TPU can provide a wipeable inner surface; water-resistance wording still depends on seams, zipper and agreed testing.
- Real bottle-positioning route: elastic loops can hold bottles in place, but the filled sample must confirm fit and movement control.
- Send before quote: actual product dimensions, filled weight, target pouch size, preferred shell route, logo method, packing and delivery country.
1. Start with the filled kit, not an empty pouch
Rivta has produced both neoprene bags and quilted PU bags, as well as packaging for essential-oil bottles. The first RFQ decision is therefore not simply “neoprene or vegan leather.” It is the exact kit layout: bottle diameter and height, jar dimensions, quantity, filled weight and whether each item must remain upright.
Send either physical samples or a dimension sheet for every item. A pouch that looks proportionally correct when empty may become too tight after padding, lining and elastic loops are added.
2. Choose neoprene and quilted PU as different construction routes
Neoprene route
Useful when the brief prioritizes a softer hand feel, flexible padding and a compact shape. Thickness should be selected only after reviewing the bottle load, seam bulk and desired finished size.
Quilted PU route
Useful when the brief prioritizes a more structured luxury surface, quilt pattern and metal hardware. The quilting, backing and reinforcement affect usable inner space.
These routes should not be quoted as interchangeable materials. They create different seams, edge profiles, weight, logo options and sample risks. If the buyer is undecided, Rivta can review both routes from the same filled-kit brief before sampling.
3. Define a wipeable lining by material and construction
One production route Rivta has used is 190D rPET laminated with TPU. It can provide a smooth, wipeable inner surface suitable for many skincare and wellness pouch briefs. The RFQ should still define what “waterproof” or “leak resistant” means for the project.
A laminated fabric does not automatically make the entire pouch waterproof. Stitch holes, binding, zipper construction and opening direction can still allow moisture movement. The safer brief is to request a wipeable lining and then define any leak test separately.
4. Use elastic loops to position bottles, then verify the filled sample
For essential-oil and bottle packaging, Rivta commonly uses elastic loops. The loop width, spacing and tension should be based on each bottle diameter rather than chosen from a generic organizer layout.
Elastic loops can reduce movement and organize the kit, but they should not be presented as guaranteed shock protection. If glass vials or bottles are involved, approve a filled construction sample and define the required transport or handling test.
5. Approve logo, zipper and hardware on the filled sample
Gold foil, debossing and metal logo plates create different tooling, surface and packing requirements. On quilted PU, logo placement must avoid uneven quilt channels and excessive surface curvature. On neoprene, logo methods should be checked against stretch and seam position.
Gold-tone zippers and metal hardware should be approved as a set under the same light. The RFQ should state whether the buyer needs a matched finish, a reference color only or an exact plated sample for approval.
6. Put the filled-sample test and packing route into the RFQ
Before bulk production, the approved sample should be loaded with the intended products and checked for closure, deformation, bottle movement, lining cleanability and logo visibility. If the kit will ship with glass containers, confirm the exact packing configuration used during testing.
| RFQ field | What to send | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Product fit | Dimensions, filled weight and quantity for every bottle or jar | Controls pouch size, loop spacing and usable clearance |
| Shell route | Neoprene or quilted PU preference | Changes structure, seams, logo and cost route |
| Lining | Wipeable requirement and any defined leak test | Separates material choice from finished-bag performance |
| Positioning | Elastic-loop count, bottle diameter and upright/flat layout | Reduces movement and prevents a generic organizer layout |
| Branding | Artwork, size, position and gold finish reference | Determines tooling and sample approval method |
| Packing | Empty pouch or pre-filled kit, individual packing and carton route | Ensures the sample test reflects the real shipment |
What Rivta needs to review your project
Send the product dimension sheet or physical items, target pouch dimensions, preferred shell route, lining requirement, logo artwork, quantity and delivery country. Rivta can then review whether the first sample should focus on construction, appearance or a final filled-kit approval.
Send a padded wellness pouch RFQ
Use the most relevant route below so the inquiry includes the right review scope.
Send Padded Pouch RFQ Review Bottle Layout Review Sample Route Send Final RFQFrequently Asked Questions
Can Rivta make both neoprene and quilted PU wellness pouches?
Yes. Rivta has produced both routes. The recommended route depends on the desired structure, surface, usable inner space, logo method and actual kit load.
Can a wipeable lining use recycled material?
One available route is 190D rPET laminated with TPU. The finished pouch's water-resistance scope still depends on seams, zipper and any agreed test.
How can essential-oil bottles be held in place?
Rivta commonly uses elastic loops for bottle packaging. Loop width, spacing and tension should be developed from the real bottle dimensions.
Does padding guarantee glass-vial protection?
No. Padding and elastic positioning can support the protection design, but performance must be confirmed with the intended filled sample and an agreed test method.
What should the buyer send before quotation?
Send product dimensions and filled weight, target pouch size, shell and lining preference, logo artwork, quantity, packing route and delivery country.
Sources
- ISTA packaged-product test procedures, referenced for defining a filled-kit transport test rather than making an unsupported protection claim. ↩
- ISO 2859-1 sampling procedures, referenced for buyer-defined acceptance sampling during bulk inspection. ↩

