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Entry Nº 02
§ Encyclopaedia · Entry Nº 02 Reference
What is —

PET?

※ Polyethylene Terephthalate Film

The strong-arm of the label trade. Heat-resistant, chemically inert, dishwasher-safe with the right ink, and the substrate behind nearly every premium metallic finish you have ever held.

§ 01

What it is

PET — Polyethylene Terephthalate — is a semi-crystalline polyester film. In the label trade, it is the strongest, most heat-resistant, most chemically inert face stock in routine production. Where BOPP is the bottle wrap of choice, PET is the answer for cosmetics, electronics, automotive, and anything that needs to survive a dishwasher or a Saudi summer.

PET is also the same polymer that makes water bottles — though the film form is different, more refined, and engineered for adhesive lamination.

§ 02

How it is made

Molten PET is extruded as an amorphous sheet, biaxially stretched (similar to BOPP), then heat-set at high temperature to crystallise the polymer. The resulting film has exceptional dimensional stability — it will not creep, shrink, or distort under normal-use conditions.

PET is typically coated with a UV-curable top-coat for printability. It accepts UV inkjet, eco-solvent, hot-foil and screen printing without surface treatment. For dishwasher- and outdoor-grade durability, only UV-cured inks fully bond.

§ 03

What it is good for

Premium cosmetics — serum bottles, perfume, scientific skincare. PET’s temperature range and chemical inertness mean it survives essential oils, alcohol-based toners, and the bathroom shelf for years.

Electronics labels — serial numbers, certification marks, asset tags. PET’s heat tolerance handles soldering proximity; its dimensional stability handles thermal cycling.

Mirror, metallic, brushed finishes — PET is the substrate for nearly all metallised label looks. The vapour-deposited aluminium layer is bonded to the underside of clear PET.

Long-life outdoor — trail markers, equipment tags, marine. PET resists UV degradation longer than BOPP or vinyl.

§ 04

Trade-offs

PET is noticeably more expensive than BOPP or vinyl — expect to pay roughly 40–80% more at comparable thicknesses. For most non-premium bottle work, BOPP is the right answer.

PET is stiffer — it does not wrap around very tight curves as well as vinyl. For complex compound curves, vinyl conforms better.

PET requires UV-cure ink for full durability. Inkjet and laser prints on PET will smear or fade in extended use. Specify the printing method when sourcing.

Press Run

See the material in person —
not in print.

Sample packs ship 3–5 day air, free for qualified buyers. Touch the material before you commit.