Catalog overview
Four product routes, multiple pack formats.
Use the catalog image as a range overview while the page leads buyers through product types, packaging flexibility, and OEM fit.
Hair Color OEM
Build ammonia, ammonia-free, one-time, or semi-permanent hair color lines with packaging routes matched to your market, brand direction, and MOQ.
Ammonia, ammonia-free, one-time, and semi-permanent routes.
Brand owners, importers, distributors, and project buyers.
Box pack, single tube, kit/set, and custom branded options.
Product type and packaging route are aligned by project scope.
Catalog overview
Use the catalog image as a range overview while the page leads buyers through product types, packaging flexibility, and OEM fit.
Who this page is for
This page is designed for buyers who already have a market, a product direction, or a line plan and need an OEM partner that can match formula route, packaging format, and project scope.
Buyer fit
Core hair color routes
Lead with four routes that buyers can quickly recognize, then use packaging and OEM support to make the right route easier to launch.
Core Type
A classic cream color direction for buyers who want a familiar, broad-market hair dye offer with dependable commercial logic.
Best for mass retail, established distributors, and price-sensitive markets that still respond to standard color communication.
Core Type
A softer color route for buyers who want a gentler claim direction without losing retail readiness or private label potential.
Best for upgraded shelf stories, modernized ranges, and buyers who want a milder positioning within the same category strategy.
Core Type
A convenience-led route for buyers who want faster-turning, lower-commitment color options alongside a classic permanent range.
Best for campaign-driven offers, younger convenience-led assortments, and buyers expanding beyond traditional cream color only.
Core Type
A softer-commitment color route for buyers who want broader shade storytelling or a more flexible color experience within the range.
Best for upgrade lines, specialty shelves, and buyers who want more variety without depending only on permanent color logic.
Buyer guidance
Use simple commercial language to show how product type, packaging route, and MOQ logic work together before the first inquiry.
Planning logic
The buying decision gets easier when the project starts from ammonia, ammonia-free, temporary, or semi-permanent logic before choosing the final pack format.
Packaging logic
We can discuss box pack, single tube, kit/set, or custom branded presentation based on the market, the claims, and the project structure.
MOQ logic
The page should attract buyers with real launch plans, so MOQ is discussed by product type and packaging route instead of positioning the factory for tiny custom runs.
Packaging flexibility
Keep the message practical: different pack routes are possible, but they should still follow product type, market fit, and project-based MOQ logic.
Packaging direction
We are an OEM manufacturer, so hair color can be discussed in box pack, single tube, kit/set, or custom branded routes. Final packaging direction depends on the product type, market positioning, and MOQ logic of the project.
Translate your brand into the right hair color format instead of forcing every project into one default pack route.
Build a starting shade family that feels commercially balanced for the first market and channel you want to win.
Match ammonia, ammonia-free, temporary, or semi-permanent direction to your price level, claims, and usage expectations.
Align the packaging route to what your market expects, whether that is a carton-led retail offer, a single-unit concept, or a kit structure.
Move from reference products or private label concepts into packaging review, sampling, and OEM alignment with a clearer project brief.
Start the conversation
The best first brief includes product type, target market, preferred packaging route, and the level of volume you want to discuss.