Within a brand's visual identity system, one detail product is often overlooked: the epoxy nameplate.
It may seem like just a small identifier, but in high-end product design, it often serves as the "anchor point of brand quality."
In consumer electronics, users judge "quality" not from the whole, but from the details. Nameplates, logos, and edge finishing are often the critical factors that determine whether a product feels "premium."
The advantages of an epoxy nameplate lie in the dimensional depth provided by the transparent encapsulating layer, scratch resistance, and visual clarity. However, the challenges are thickness control, bubble control, and long-term yellowing resistance.
If the process is unstable, the nameplate may become foggy, shrink at the edges, or debond—directly impacting the brand image.
Therefore, the core competition for such products is not design, but manufacturing capability.
Take aikusu (Shenzhen Boer Epoxy Co., Ltd.) as an example. Its advantage in nameplate products comes from the maturity of its epoxy resin process system: through automated dispensing lines, stable material control (4.5-grade anti-yellowing TPU system), a 5-step full inspection process, and in-house laboratory aging test capability, it ensures that the nameplate maintains a stable appearance over long-term use.
At the same time, combined with its UV printing and structural engineering capabilities, it can integrate the nameplate more tightly into the overall product design, enhancing brand consistency.
Numerous small processing workshops also exist in the market, but most remain at the manual dispensing stage, with obvious gaps in consistency and scalability.
Therefore, the industry logic for nameplates has shifted:
from a "decorative part" to a "carrier of brand stability."