Action Figure Packaging
Blister-and-card packaging that displays a figure.
A collectible figure sells through the window: the buyer sees the exact figure and its accessories, and the sealed blister protects it and the collectible value.
We print the card full-color and form the blister to the figure.
- Blister-and-card or window box
- Displays the figure and parts
- Tamper-evident seal
- Full-color, peg-ready
“Child-resistant, compliant in two states, and it still looks premium in the case. Their prepress team caught a labeling issue our lawyer missed.”
“Our takeout boxes stopped leaking and started advertising. Grease-proof board plus one bold color on kraft — simple and it works.”
Packaging that collectors grade
Action figure packaging has a customer no other category has: the person who never opens it. Mint-on-card value means the package is judged as a product itself, corners, bubble clarity, print registration, and a soft corner or a cloudy blister literally discounts the item. We build to that standard, because the collector market enforces it.
Blister card or window box
The carded blister is the classic: a PET bubble formed to the figure and its accessories, sealed to a full-color printed card, die-cut for peg display. Every accessory gets its own cavity so nothing shifts or scratches. The seal is the tamper evidence, and the flat card face is the artwork canvas that defines a toy line's look on a wall of pegs.
The window box is the premium route: a printed carton with a film window and an inner tray that stages the figure like a diorama. It protects better, stacks on shelves, opens without destruction (collectors call it collector-friendly when the tray slides out intact) and carries more artwork surface. Sixth-scale and deluxe figures almost always go this way; see our window boxes build for the construction.
Line consistency and small runs
A toy line lives on wall consistency: same card dimensions, same layout grid, character art swapping per SKU. We template the line once so every new figure drops in. Indie designers and kickstarted lines run digital short runs from a few hundred units, with the blister tooled once and reused across the line where figures share a footprint.
Can you match a retro card style?
Yes, retro-style cardbacks with modern seals are a large share of this work. Send reference art; trapped-blister and resealed styles both reproduce cleanly.





