Custom Luggage & Suitcase Manufacturer You Can Trust.
| Size | 20 inch, 24 inch, 28 inch |
|---|---|
| Shell Material | PC |
| Trolley | Aluminum Trolley |
| Lock | Built-in TSA Lock |
| Handle | PP Material Handle |
| Wheels | 360° caster wheels, 8 Wheels, Silent Double Row Wheels, Wheel Stoppers |
| Lining | 150T High Density Lining |
| Color | Customization |
| MOQ | 600 |
| OEM&ODM Service | Aviliable |
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Most luggage blends into the background. Here, we used a clean, smooth PC shell but added sharp yellow accents on the wheels and handle. It’s enough to catch the eye without looking like a toy.
When you print a large-scale corporate logo across that flat front panel, it stays crisp. No warping over ridges. It turns the suitcase into a moving billboard. If you’ve ever tried to screen-print on a standard ribbed suitcase and ended up with “bleeding” ink in the grooves, you’ll know exactly why this flat design is a relief for the production line.
The Detail Managers Always Miss: The Bottom Grab Handle
There is one feature we added that usually doesn’t show up in the “marketing photos” but gets mentioned in every customer feedback report: the integrated bottom handle.
When you’re at a taxi stand in Tokyo or lifting a bag into an overhead rack on the KTX, you realize that a top handle isn’t enough. You need a second anchor point. We molded a recessed grip into the bottom base of the suitcase. It’s flush with the shell so it doesn’t ruin the clean lines, but it gives the user a solid, two-handed grip for heavy lifting. It’s a small mechanical addition that makes a “promotional gift” feel like a “premium tool.”
When this case actually makes sense
This is the “hero” product for corporate loyalty programs or high-end promotional gifts. It’s for the client who says, “I want our brand to be visible from 20 meters away in a terminal.”
The yellow accents on the silent spinner wheels give it a modern, energetic feel that resonates well with the tech and creative sectors in the East Asian market. It’s also surprisingly effective for supermarket “limited edition” runs because the visual contrast on the shelf is so high compared to the sea of plain black bags.
One small habit that matters
Notice the handle grip. We used a slightly higher-density TPE for the yellow touchpoints. In cold weather—like a winter morning in Hokkaido—cheaper plastics get brittle and feel hard. These stay flexible. It’s a tiny detail, but it’s the difference between a gift that gets used for years and one that ends up in the back of a closet after the first trip.
Where it falls short
Don’t pitch this to “hardcore” business travelers who live out of their suitcases 300 days a year. Because we sacrificed the structural ribbing to get that smooth logo surface, the shell is slightly more flexible. It’s tough PC material, but it doesn’t have the rigid “armor” feel of a heavy-duty trunk. It’s a marketing-first product, not a tactical gear box.
Do you want to see a digital mockup of how a specific logo size looks on this flat panel? We can also provide the Pantone codes for the yellow accent parts.
Japanese procurement teams visiting our PC Cabin Luggage Suitcase line rarely start with the large equipment. Their attention goes straight to the silk-screening area, where they check whether a full-size corporate logo can be printed on a flat PC panel with no dust trapped under the ink and no surface imperfections.
The reality of corporate gift orders
Most of our work for the South Korean and Japanese gift markets isn’t just about blowing shells. It’s about color precision. Last month, we had a client who needed the wheel hubs to match their brand’s specific “Electric Yellow.”
We don’t just pick a plastic pellet and hope for the best. We ran three different test batches of the TPE wheel tires because the color shifts slightly during the high-heat injection process. I tell my clients upfront: “If you want this exact yellow on both the hard shell and the soft rubber wheels, we need five days just for the color-matching stage.” If a factory tells you they can match three different materials in 24 hours, they’re lying or they aren’t looking at the product under D65 standard light.
Dealing with the “Smooth Shell” problem
The smooth, flat-panel design of this cabin case is great for logos, but it’s a magnet for scratches during assembly. On the line, we have to use extra-thick protective film. One “real” problem we face? Static electricity. In dry weather, the PC shells attract dust like crazy right before the logo printing.
To fix this, we had to install extra ion blowers at the printing station. It slows the line down by maybe 10%, but it beats having a corporate client reject 500 units because of a tiny bubble in their brand name.
What orders fit us best
We are most efficient when we’re doing 1,000+ unit runs for corporate events or high-end gift promotions. Our setup is tuned for high-consistency logo application and custom-colored accents (wheels, handles, zippers).
What we avoid? Rapid-fire, “cheap” supermarket stock where quality doesn’t matter. We aren’t the cheapest shop in the province because we spend too much time on the finishing. If you’re looking for the lowest possible price and don’t care about a 2mm logo misalignment, we aren’t your factory.






Custom Luggage & Suitcase Manufacturer You Can Trust.