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Jarsking at Cosmoprof North America 2026 | Brand-Led Packaging Development

Chloe Fong

Chloe Fong

Business Journalist

Jarsking is exhibiting at Cosmoprof North America Las Vegas 2026, held at the Mandalay Bay Convention Center from July 13–15, 2026, at Booth 47270–47278. This year the focus is not a catalog of stock bottles. It is a single capability: developing original packaging from a brand’s visual identity — through Jarsking Studio, Jarsking’s design-led OBM service. The booth is where the conversation starts; the development work happens through the Studio’s structured design-to-production process. This article explains what that means, walks through real brand systems Jarsking has built, and covers the 2026 beauty packaging trends driving demand at the show.

cosmoprof Vegas 2026 poster
Jarsking will meet you at COSMOPROF Las Vegas 2026!!

What is Cosmoprof North America, and why does it matter for packaging?

Cosmoprof North America (CPNA) is North America’s largest B2B beauty trade event, bringing together brand owners, formulators, contract manufacturers, distributors, and packaging suppliers under one roof. The 2026 Las Vegas edition runs July 13–15 at the Mandalay Bay Convention Center, and the packaging halls are where beauty brands go to solve a specific problem: turning a product idea into something that can actually sit on a shelf, survive a supply chain, and express a brand.

For a packaging buyer, CPNA is less about browsing and more about finding a partner. The brands that get the most out of the show arrive with a brief — a formula, a positioning, a visual world — and look for a manufacturer who can develop packaging around it rather than hand over a stock-mold catalog. That is exactly the gap Jarsking is at the show to close.

You will find Jarsking at Booth 47270–47278.

cosmoprof Vegas 2026 booth
Jarsking's booth at COSMOPROF Las Vegas

The problem most beauty brands hit with packaging suppliers

Most brands arrive at a trade show with a clear visual identity already in hand: a logo, a color world, a mood, a sense of how the product should feel in the hand. What they often cannot find is a supplier who can translate that identity into manufacturable packaging.

The typical chain looks like this. A factory shows existing molds. The brand picks the closest match. The design gets compromised to fit what the tooling already allows. The finished product looks like a hundred others on the shelf because it started from a shared mold, not from the brand.

The gap is between “here is my brand” and “here is packaging that expresses it and can be produced at scale.” Bridging that gap requires design capability, structural engineering, color-material-finish (CMF) strategy, and in-house manufacturing — under one roof. That combination is what Jarsking is promoting at Cosmoprof 2026.

OEM, ODM, OBM: where Jarsking's 2026 message sits

To understand what is new, it helps to define the three service models clearly, because most suppliers stop at the first two.

ModelWhat it meansWho controls designBest for
OEM (Original Equipment Mfg.)Build to your exact specs and drawingsYou — you keep the IPBrands with finished packaging designs ready to produce
ODM (Original Design Mfg.)Customize one of 30,000+ proven molds — change color, material, finish, brandingShared — you adapt an existing platformBrands wanting speed and lower cost on a proven structure
OBM (Original Brand Mfg.)Project-based, design-led, R&D-driven co-development of a full custom systemCo-developed from your brand briefBrands building an original, ownable packaging identity

 

Jarsking, founded in 2003, offers all three. The news for 2026 is the emphasis on the top rung — OBM — packaged as Jarsking Studio. Instead of starting from a mold, Studio starts from a brand’s visual identity and develops the structure, CMF system, and secondary packaging around it. It is the difference between selecting packaging and originating it.

Inside Jarsking Studio: from brand visual to finished bottle

Jarsking Studio runs every project through the same five-stage arc. Each stage starts from the brand’s visual language and ends one step closer to a production-ready package.

Brief. The Studio opens with questions, not quotes — a structured discovery session that clarifies category, channel, consumer, price point, and competitive landscape. The initial idea becomes a focused design problem.

Moodboard. A curated visual direction built around the brand’s aesthetic language: materials, finishes, color references, form inspirations, and tonal cues drawn from the brand’s market positioning.

CMF Strategy. Color, Material, and Finish decisions are specified as a coherent system — designed to hold together across a full SKU range, not picked à la carte.

3D Render. Photorealistic visualization of the proposed packaging before any physical prototype exists, so a brand can evaluate proportion, finish, and shelf presence without committing to tooling costs. For existing molds, Jarsking can turn a concept into a 3D demo in as little as one hour; full custom CMF proposals are typically delivered in 2–4 weeks.

Prototype. A physical sample built from the agreed direction — something a brand can hold, fill, photograph, and test with stakeholders until every detail is refined and ready for production.

What makes this credible rather than a pitch is the manufacturing behind it. Jarsking runs 100,000 m² of self-owned factories plus partner factories, 30,000+ ready-to-use molds, an in-house Mold Manufacturing Center, a glass workshop melting 52 tons/day, plastic injection and blow-molding lines, carton production, and in-house decoration (screen printing, hot stamping, spraying, metallization). A design that leaves the Studio does not get handed to a stranger — it gets built in-house. The design team itself is 30+ packaging designers specialized in beauty, fragrance, and wellness.

Jarsking Studio design process
Jarsking Studio's packaging design process

Proof: real brand systems Jarsking has developed

The OBM capability is easiest to judge by what it has produced. A few representative Jarsking Studio projects, spanning categories and materials:

  • VEILBORN™ — a luxury fragrance trilogy: three character-driven collector bottles, modular cap systems, rigid gift boxes, and a full brand world, designed and engineered end-to-end.
  • MIRROIR — a 7-SKU K-beauty glass hair-care system, including structural design, material and finish strategy, gift-set packaging, and retail display.
  • DERMIS//01 — a 5-SKU cosmeceutical skincare system built on an airless-ready capsule glass platform, developed across OEM/ODM/OBM scopes.
  • PLA Bio-Monolith and the Hearwood wood-fiber composite series — sustainability-led systems pairing renewable materials with luxury design discipline, for brands that need a credible fossil-reduced packaging narrative.

These are not mockups. They show the same desk handling creative concept and manufacturing execution — which is the whole point of OBM.

PETALE skincare moodboard with rose, skin close-up and water textures
PÉTALE is a prestige skincare packaging concept conceived and manufactured by Jarsking — five SKUs in thick-base glass, a custom botanical logotype, and a dual-tone color system spanning champagne nude to deep rose crimson. One structural platform.

What actually happens at Booth 47270–47278

Here is the honest framing, because it matters for setting expectations: the booth starts it; the Studio finishes it.

At Cosmoprof, you will meet Jarsking’s commercial team and see the physical catalog, samples, and finishes in person. The booth is the handshake — the place to feel the glass weight, compare a hot-stamped cap to a sprayed one, and talk through what your brand needs. The Jarsking representatives on site are there to understand your brief and connect you to the people who execute it.

What the booth is not is a live design studio. The 30+ designers, the CMF specialists, and the engineering team work from Jarsking’s facilities, not the show floor. That is deliberate. Real packaging development is not sketched on a napkin between meetings — it runs through the five-stage Studio process, with manufacturing reality checked at every step. So the booth is where your brief is captured and the relationship begins; the Studio is where your visual identity becomes a manufacturable system in the weeks after the show. Treating those as two distinct steps is what keeps the work serious.

The 2026 beauty packaging trends shaping the show

Demand at Cosmoprof 2026 is being driven by a handful of clear movements. These are the directions Jarsking is building toward, and the ones worth watching as a buyer.

Refillable and airless systems. Refill architectures and airless pumps continue to grow — they protect oxidation-prone actives, reduce material per use, and signal premium sustainability. Expect refillable cream jars and airless serum bottles to dominate prestige skincare.

Mono-material, design-for-recycling. Brands are simplifying packaging to single material families so it can actually be recycled, rather than gluing dissimilar materials together. This is a structural design decision, not a sticker.

PCR and bio-based materials. Post-consumer recycled (PCR) plastics, PLA, and bamboo are moving from niche to expected, especially where a brand needs to substantiate a sustainability claim with material documentation.

CMF-led premiumization. As shelves get more crowded, color, material, and finish do the heavy lifting on perceived value — heavy-base flint glass, soft-touch coatings, metallization, and precise decoration registration separate prestige from mass.

Brand-visual-driven custom development. The broadest trend, and the one underpinning all of the above: brands no longer want generic packaging adapted to their logo. They want packaging originated from their visual identity. That is the demand Jarsking Studio is built to serve.

dual-chamber-airless-bottle-gift-box-set
Jarsking's Dual-Chamber Airless Bottle 50–120ml for Cosmeceutical Brands

Who should stop by the Jarsking booth

  • Indie and emerging beauty founders who have a strong brand visual but need a partner to turn it into a full, manufacturable packaging system without juggling multiple vendors.
  • Established brands refreshing or extending a line who want CMF and structural consistency across SKUs.
  • Design studios, agencies, and influencer-led brands who own the creative but need a manufacturing partner to engineer and produce it at scale.

Jarsking has produced packaging for brands sold through Sephora, Walmart, Watsons, Douglas, Rossmann, DM, and Mercadona — useful proof that brand-led development survives the jump to real retail.

FAQs

Jarsking is at Booth 47270–47278, Mandalay Bay Convention Center, Las Vegas, during Cosmoprof North America, July 13–15, 2026.

Jarsking Studio is Jarsking’s design-led OBM service. It develops original cosmetic packaging from a brand’s visual identity through a five-stage process — Brief, Moodboard, CMF Strategy, 3D Render, and Prototype — backed by in-house manufacturing.

No. The booth is staffed by Jarsking’s commercial team, who capture your brief and show physical samples. The design and engineering work is carried out afterward by Jarsking Studio’s 30+ packaging designers and engineering team. The booth starts the project; the Studio executes it.

OEM builds to your finished specs (you keep the IP). ODM customizes one of 30,000+ proven molds for speed and lower cost. OBM is project-based, design-led co-development of a fully original packaging system from your brand brief.

For existing molds, a 3D demo can be produced in as little as one hour. Full custom CMF proposals are typically delivered in 2–4 weeks. OBM full-development lead times run roughly 84–110 days including steel-mold tooling (confirm per project; excludes shipping).

Glass bottles and jars (5–500ml), PET/PE/PP plastics, tubes, airless systems, dropper bottles, pumps and closures, perfume atomizers, plus secondary packaging — labels, folding cartons, and luxury rigid gift boxes. Decoration is done in-house.

Yes — PCR plastics, refillable and airless systems, PLA and bamboo, and mono-material design-for-recycling, with material documentation to support sustainability claims.

    About the Author

    Business journalist Chloe Fong reports from the intersection of commerce and creativity. She deciphers complex market trends to provide actionable insights for leaders in the beauty, perfume, and wellness industries.

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