Marie Redding, Senior Editor06.04.21
Airless packaging protects highly sensitive formulations—and often provides ease of use, ergonomic dispensing, repeatable dosing, and the ability to evacuate 100% of a product. Airless dispensers typically use a piston or pouch system with a pump paired with a bottle or jar.
The global market for airless packaging was estimated at $4.7 billion last year, and is projected to reach $6.4 billion by 2027, growing at a CAGR of 4.5%, according to Global Industry Analysts’ report published in April 2021. The growing demand for premium cosmetic products such as natural skin care creams, foundations, and serums, is expected to drive market growth, globally, states Grand View Research.
The rise of “clean” beauty is one factor fueling the need for airless packaging since it is often necessary to protect formulas that contain fewer preservatives. “In the era of ‘clean beauty,’ airless pumps are becoming the go-to pack because they can extend a product’s shelf life,” says Jackie Paterno, vice president of East Coast Sales, CTK Cosmetics.
Biossance worked with NF Beauty Group to launch its Squalane + Lactic Acid Resurfacing Night Serum in an airless pump. “We see a recent increase in demand for airless packaging for formulas that are more fluid, such as serums,” says Joyce Kim, purchasing coordinator, NF Beauty.
Korres Black Pine 3D Eye Lift Super Serum, which carries the “Clean at Sephora” seal, is in an airless dosage-control pen. It features a dispensing tip that delivers a targeted application to the eye area. It contains black pine extract to target signs of aging—plus an all-natural active complex.
Robert Bulla, director of engineering & innovation, APC Packaging, sees an increasing demand for airless packaging since the pandemic. “Airless packaging allows access to a product without contamination by touching—and demand is definitely up now, since Covid,” he says.
TULA Skincare just launched #EmbraceYourSkin Influencer Kits, and two of the products in Nyma Tang’s hydrating skincare kit are in airless packaging— ‘Dew Your Thing’ gel cream (shown) and ‘Face Filter’ primer. ‘Dew Your Thing’ Gel Cream facial moisturizer is in an upside-down bottle with an airless pump dispenser. “The ergonomics ensures that users can extract all of the product needed for application, and the product can be dispensed without contamination. It makes it much more convenient to apply on-the-go or at public places like the gym,” says Savannah Sachs, CEO, TULA Skincare.
Beauty consumers began carefully reading ingredient labels several years ago—and now they are paying more attention to packaging, looking for both eco-friendly and hygienic solutions, suppliers say. “Beauty consumers are buying products that take a ‘greener’ approach. They also favor packaging that ensures product integrity. Our airless and touchless solutions guarantee this,” says Romualdo Priore, marketing director, Lumson.
Airless & Also Sustainable?
Sustainable packaging, however, is about using less materials and less packaging. A standard plastic pump often has a metal spring, as well as other small components. This is deterring some Indie brands from using pumps—and may begin to shift consumer attitudes toward them. Suppliers have developed mono-material designs—but pumps aren’t collected in curbside recycling.
“Can we develop a 100% PP pump that can be recycled? That is the big question,” says Brian Saputo, president of SeaCliff Beauty. “Municipal recycling facilities typically don’t recycle pumps. They know that they’re mixed materials,” he says. “For this to work, we need to develop a recyclable pump and a method of recovery,” he says.
Both beauty brands and suppliers agree, however, that there is a growing need for airless packaging, even as reducing our environmental impact is a top priority. “For active, sensitive ingredients and advanced skincare formulas, the added value that airless packaging delivers—including protecting the formula, limiting product waste, extending shelf-life, and controlling the dosage—is hugely important,” says Lynn Lu, global skincare product manager, HCP.
Many innovative airless packaging solutions have eco-friendly features. “Using PCR plastic or PCR glass for airless packaging helps to reduce its environmental impact—and refillable solutions help as well,” says Federico Prestini, managing director, Premi Beauty Industries. “Beauty consumers today are interested in buying products that they know are good for them and the planet,” he adds.
Saputo says the team at SeaCliff is seeing a surge in requests for refillable airless packages. “We offer refillable airless pumps and jars with both glass and plastic outers, which contain various levels of PCR,” he says.
Daniel Cha, overseas sales department vice president, Pum-Tech Korea, which has an exclusive partnership with HCP, also says airless packaging can be sustainable—especially when it is refillable. “We find that ‘green’ and natural beauty brands often have two packaging directives—a high level of product preservation and plastic reduction,” Cha says. “Airless refillable packaging with minimal decoration is an ideal solution and ticks both boxes,” he says. As of this year, Pum-Tech offers a minimum of 30% PCR in overall content for all its packs, including those with mixed materials.
SGB’s new Bio-Airless is made with bio-based resins. The company also offers airless packaging made with 25% or 50% PCR. “ ‘Clean’ beauty brands continue to pop up in the market, with formulas that contain very few ingredients—and these require airless packaging. We’re happy to offer these brands sustainable airless packaging options,” says Lauren Gibli, executive vice president of sales & operations, SGB.
SGB’s airless system uses bag-and-pouch technology, which has a restitution rate of more than 90%. More than 10 different airless ranges, in all styles, are available—in sizes up to 250ml.
Pierre-Antoine Henry, head of categories, Quadpack, also says airless can be eco-friendly. “Airless packaging and sustainability often coexist—but not all formulas require airless functionality and all the benefits it brings,” he says. “Some semi-sensitive products may only require an airtight pack. Less is more—and being more sustainable is about going back to the simplest form of packaging for formulas that don’t need ‘more,’ ” he advises.
Airless Affects a Product’s Efficacy
Airless packaging can ensure a product’s efficacy when a formula contains specific actives. “Hybrid formulas are hot right now in skincare, such as moisturizers that are a cross between a serum and a moisturizer. These almost always require airless packs,” says CTK’s Paterno.
Quadpack’s Henry says he sees many new types of skincare formulas emerging that contain ingredients sensitive to oxidation. “These new formulas contain actives such as retinol, new forms of hyaluronic acid, and Vitamin C—and they are a perfect fit for airless packaging,” he says. “There is also an ongoing ‘skinification’ of makeup, with more functionality and actives,” he adds.
Beauty brands are requesting airless packaging for liquid foundation, primer, suncare, BB cream, blush, and highlighter, according to Lu. HCP’s airless compacts, supplied via an exclusive partnership with Pum-Tech Korea, are ideal for these products. “Our airless compacts are in high demand. They are suitable for a variety of formula viscosities and provide controlled product release, excellent hygiene due to reduced risk of contamination, and they extend product shelf-life,” she says.
Suppliers are meeting demands by offering beauty brands airless packaging solutions in new styles, with sustainable features and refillable options—several are featured here.
Refillable Airless Bottles
Quadpack just launched its Regula Airless Refill. Many beauty brands already use the supplier’s best-selling Regula Airless, including the Belgian brand Craith Lab—and now, several brands are in the process of switching to the new refillable version. “It is more eco-friendly, yet its appearance remains unchanged,” says Henry, which makes it an easy switch.
The Regula Airless Refill has an innovative snap-on ring. This design makes it possible for a brand or filler to fill and insert the refill into the reusable bottle using a safe system that protects the formula’s integrity. A thread system on the bottle makes it easy for consumers to disassemble it to insert a new refill. In addition, the pump is metal-free.
Quadpack’s design team had a few challenges to overcome. “It’s more than just a simple refill pack. We had to ensure it delivers a user experience in line with beauty’s high standards—and the refill couldn’t impact the dimensions of the product in hand,” Henry says. “We also had to limit the amount of material and number of pieces in the entire pack—and ensure its continuous performance over time,” he explains.
SeaCliff Beauty offers its ECO Airless collection, which is available in a refillable style. “It is made with eco-friendly materials and a metal-free pump design,” says Saputo. “It is 98% PP with a small amount of LDPE. It has a glass outer bottle for recyclability, and a refillable part in PP,” he says. Available in various sizes, SeaCliff Beauty’s ECO Airless line can also be customized in a multitude of ways.
APC Packaging launched its patented Airless Refillable System (ARS) last year. Designed by APC’s engineering department, ARS features a push-button that releases the bottle’s inner assembly. “This intuitive design allows the consumer to easily replace only the inner bottle, and slide and snap it back into position,” explains Bulla.
ARS is polypropylene (PP), but can also be produced using 75% to 100% PCR by package weight. The internal cartridge can be recycled and a new cartridge can be used with the same actuator and outer bottle. “These features reduce ARS’s carbon footprint and environmental impact,” says Bulla. “Most airless refillable packages on the market are simply a screw-off pump branded as refillable, without utilizing materials that are easily recyclable,” he says.
APC is currently co-developing a mono-material airless pump in an unusual size, with a national brand. “ARS is gaining ground, but I believe demand will explode when we reveal our all-PP mono-material airless pump engine,” Bulla says.
ECO Airless Bottles
CTK offers its Cream Pump line, featuring its Eco-Airless Pump—a springless, metal-free dispensing system.
“The pump is polypropylene,” says Paterno. “We are excited to launch a full range of sizes—from 5ml up to 50ml,” she says.
CTK’s Eco-Airless collection is based on the supplier’s patented technology that replaces the metal SUS spring. The pump’s evacuation system was also recently improved—and it can accommodate any type of product. “No viscosity is too high,” says Paterno. “This package can even pump out balms and toothpaste,” she says.
CTK’s in-house sustainability team consults with brands on decorating options to customize its stock lines. “We help to guide beauty brands on the various types of eco-friendly decorations to use, to ensure a package’s recyclability isn’t affected,” Paterno explains.
Premi Beauty Industries offers a collection of mono-material airless packaging in polypropylene called Airless Tech. Another collection, Nema, includes three slim transparent bottles in 15-, 20-, and 30ml sizes, which showcase the product inside. “We can customize our airless packages with different finishes,” Prestini says.
Refillable Airless Compacts
HCP, in partnership with Pum-Tech Korea, offers a variety of airless compacts with a refill format. A new innovation, the Portable Airless Jar/Compact, is a low profile, 30g pack that is ideal for liquid foundation or hybrid skincare-cosmetic products such as tone-up cream.
“All the Pum-Tech Korea Airless Compacts feature an airless dispensing system with a self-sealing orifice to minimize air contact for effective product preservation and to prevent liquid formulas from drying out,” explains Lu. “A precise dosage control of 0.2cc is achieved via a wide palette press, which features great product evacuation to limit waste,” she says.
HCP and Pum-Tech also offer “deco type” airless compacts, which feature a decorative film added to the palette for graphics and logos. “The film is applied via insert molding technology, so as not to have contact with the formula,” Lu says. “Alternatively, the palette can be vacuum metallized to give a luxurious metallic aesthetic,” she adds.
Aluminum Airless
Lumson offers its new TAL, ‘Techno Airless Aluminum’ —and the supplier says it is the first airless system with pouch technology in an aluminum container. TAL is recyclable, and the components separate easily. “It’s innovative, high-tech, and sustainable—and the perfect answer to the beauty market’s demands for maximum safety and sustainability,” says Priore. TAL is available in several sizes.
Lumson’s “Half Moon” pump, which dispenses a 500µl dosage, is a part of the TAL package, along with a multilayer pouch. “The pump stands out for its refined ‘design,” says Priore.
“Aluminum is a material that is extremely easy to decorate, and TAL can be easily customized with different decorations and finishes,” he says.
Refillable Airless—In Glass
Premi Beauty Industries offers airless systems in refillable glass packaging—and the team says it was the first to market this innovative airless design three years ago.
Premi’s top seller is its Airglass Slim Refill—an elegant, eco-friendly design. The airless package features a refillable glass bottle. “Our R&D and industrial design teams made sure the components easily separate for recycling,” says Prestini. Ideal for luxury makeup and skincare, it comes in several sizes and many types of customized decorations are available.
Creatives, trend specialists, industrial designers, and graphic designers all work together on package design and development in the Premi Studio. “We combine our production and decoration capabilities to create products that can stand out easily in the beauty market,” says Prestini.
What’s Next?
Will the need for airless packaging slow due to trends such as “waterless” beauty? Some brands are swapping body wash for bar soap, for example, in an effort to reduce packaging.
“The rise in solid beauty formulations doesn’t apply to every type of product,” says Premi Beauty’s Prestini. “Makeup and skin-care will always require the best type of package to deliver the best performance—and that is often an airless package,” he says. “But it is more important now to use less material and less packaging,” he adds.
The team at Quadpack is anticipating a rising demand for airless packaging, and will launch its new Canvas airless collection later this year. “We will offer new airless options and customization—we are on the verge of launching a disruptive technology, but we can’t release any details yet,” says Henry.
The team at APC is working on adding new sizes to its Airless Refillable System, including a 0.25ml and 0.50ml dose.
Prestini believes, “The demand for airless packaging will always be high. It provides all types of beauty products with greater functionality, safety, and a higher perceived value.”
The global market for airless packaging was estimated at $4.7 billion last year, and is projected to reach $6.4 billion by 2027, growing at a CAGR of 4.5%, according to Global Industry Analysts’ report published in April 2021. The growing demand for premium cosmetic products such as natural skin care creams, foundations, and serums, is expected to drive market growth, globally, states Grand View Research.
The rise of “clean” beauty is one factor fueling the need for airless packaging since it is often necessary to protect formulas that contain fewer preservatives. “In the era of ‘clean beauty,’ airless pumps are becoming the go-to pack because they can extend a product’s shelf life,” says Jackie Paterno, vice president of East Coast Sales, CTK Cosmetics.
Biossance worked with NF Beauty Group to launch its Squalane + Lactic Acid Resurfacing Night Serum in an airless pump. “We see a recent increase in demand for airless packaging for formulas that are more fluid, such as serums,” says Joyce Kim, purchasing coordinator, NF Beauty.
Korres Black Pine 3D Eye Lift Super Serum, which carries the “Clean at Sephora” seal, is in an airless dosage-control pen. It features a dispensing tip that delivers a targeted application to the eye area. It contains black pine extract to target signs of aging—plus an all-natural active complex.
Robert Bulla, director of engineering & innovation, APC Packaging, sees an increasing demand for airless packaging since the pandemic. “Airless packaging allows access to a product without contamination by touching—and demand is definitely up now, since Covid,” he says.
TULA Skincare just launched #EmbraceYourSkin Influencer Kits, and two of the products in Nyma Tang’s hydrating skincare kit are in airless packaging— ‘Dew Your Thing’ gel cream (shown) and ‘Face Filter’ primer. ‘Dew Your Thing’ Gel Cream facial moisturizer is in an upside-down bottle with an airless pump dispenser. “The ergonomics ensures that users can extract all of the product needed for application, and the product can be dispensed without contamination. It makes it much more convenient to apply on-the-go or at public places like the gym,” says Savannah Sachs, CEO, TULA Skincare.
Beauty consumers began carefully reading ingredient labels several years ago—and now they are paying more attention to packaging, looking for both eco-friendly and hygienic solutions, suppliers say. “Beauty consumers are buying products that take a ‘greener’ approach. They also favor packaging that ensures product integrity. Our airless and touchless solutions guarantee this,” says Romualdo Priore, marketing director, Lumson.
Airless & Also Sustainable?
Sustainable packaging, however, is about using less materials and less packaging. A standard plastic pump often has a metal spring, as well as other small components. This is deterring some Indie brands from using pumps—and may begin to shift consumer attitudes toward them. Suppliers have developed mono-material designs—but pumps aren’t collected in curbside recycling.
“Can we develop a 100% PP pump that can be recycled? That is the big question,” says Brian Saputo, president of SeaCliff Beauty. “Municipal recycling facilities typically don’t recycle pumps. They know that they’re mixed materials,” he says. “For this to work, we need to develop a recyclable pump and a method of recovery,” he says.
Both beauty brands and suppliers agree, however, that there is a growing need for airless packaging, even as reducing our environmental impact is a top priority. “For active, sensitive ingredients and advanced skincare formulas, the added value that airless packaging delivers—including protecting the formula, limiting product waste, extending shelf-life, and controlling the dosage—is hugely important,” says Lynn Lu, global skincare product manager, HCP.
Many innovative airless packaging solutions have eco-friendly features. “Using PCR plastic or PCR glass for airless packaging helps to reduce its environmental impact—and refillable solutions help as well,” says Federico Prestini, managing director, Premi Beauty Industries. “Beauty consumers today are interested in buying products that they know are good for them and the planet,” he adds.
Saputo says the team at SeaCliff is seeing a surge in requests for refillable airless packages. “We offer refillable airless pumps and jars with both glass and plastic outers, which contain various levels of PCR,” he says.
Daniel Cha, overseas sales department vice president, Pum-Tech Korea, which has an exclusive partnership with HCP, also says airless packaging can be sustainable—especially when it is refillable. “We find that ‘green’ and natural beauty brands often have two packaging directives—a high level of product preservation and plastic reduction,” Cha says. “Airless refillable packaging with minimal decoration is an ideal solution and ticks both boxes,” he says. As of this year, Pum-Tech offers a minimum of 30% PCR in overall content for all its packs, including those with mixed materials.
SGB’s new Bio-Airless is made with bio-based resins. The company also offers airless packaging made with 25% or 50% PCR. “ ‘Clean’ beauty brands continue to pop up in the market, with formulas that contain very few ingredients—and these require airless packaging. We’re happy to offer these brands sustainable airless packaging options,” says Lauren Gibli, executive vice president of sales & operations, SGB.
SGB’s airless system uses bag-and-pouch technology, which has a restitution rate of more than 90%. More than 10 different airless ranges, in all styles, are available—in sizes up to 250ml.
Pierre-Antoine Henry, head of categories, Quadpack, also says airless can be eco-friendly. “Airless packaging and sustainability often coexist—but not all formulas require airless functionality and all the benefits it brings,” he says. “Some semi-sensitive products may only require an airtight pack. Less is more—and being more sustainable is about going back to the simplest form of packaging for formulas that don’t need ‘more,’ ” he advises.
Airless Affects a Product’s Efficacy
Airless packaging can ensure a product’s efficacy when a formula contains specific actives. “Hybrid formulas are hot right now in skincare, such as moisturizers that are a cross between a serum and a moisturizer. These almost always require airless packs,” says CTK’s Paterno.
Quadpack’s Henry says he sees many new types of skincare formulas emerging that contain ingredients sensitive to oxidation. “These new formulas contain actives such as retinol, new forms of hyaluronic acid, and Vitamin C—and they are a perfect fit for airless packaging,” he says. “There is also an ongoing ‘skinification’ of makeup, with more functionality and actives,” he adds.
Beauty brands are requesting airless packaging for liquid foundation, primer, suncare, BB cream, blush, and highlighter, according to Lu. HCP’s airless compacts, supplied via an exclusive partnership with Pum-Tech Korea, are ideal for these products. “Our airless compacts are in high demand. They are suitable for a variety of formula viscosities and provide controlled product release, excellent hygiene due to reduced risk of contamination, and they extend product shelf-life,” she says.
Suppliers are meeting demands by offering beauty brands airless packaging solutions in new styles, with sustainable features and refillable options—several are featured here.
Refillable Airless Bottles
Quadpack just launched its Regula Airless Refill. Many beauty brands already use the supplier’s best-selling Regula Airless, including the Belgian brand Craith Lab—and now, several brands are in the process of switching to the new refillable version. “It is more eco-friendly, yet its appearance remains unchanged,” says Henry, which makes it an easy switch.
The Regula Airless Refill has an innovative snap-on ring. This design makes it possible for a brand or filler to fill and insert the refill into the reusable bottle using a safe system that protects the formula’s integrity. A thread system on the bottle makes it easy for consumers to disassemble it to insert a new refill. In addition, the pump is metal-free.
Quadpack’s design team had a few challenges to overcome. “It’s more than just a simple refill pack. We had to ensure it delivers a user experience in line with beauty’s high standards—and the refill couldn’t impact the dimensions of the product in hand,” Henry says. “We also had to limit the amount of material and number of pieces in the entire pack—and ensure its continuous performance over time,” he explains.
SeaCliff Beauty offers its ECO Airless collection, which is available in a refillable style. “It is made with eco-friendly materials and a metal-free pump design,” says Saputo. “It is 98% PP with a small amount of LDPE. It has a glass outer bottle for recyclability, and a refillable part in PP,” he says. Available in various sizes, SeaCliff Beauty’s ECO Airless line can also be customized in a multitude of ways.
APC Packaging launched its patented Airless Refillable System (ARS) last year. Designed by APC’s engineering department, ARS features a push-button that releases the bottle’s inner assembly. “This intuitive design allows the consumer to easily replace only the inner bottle, and slide and snap it back into position,” explains Bulla.
ARS is polypropylene (PP), but can also be produced using 75% to 100% PCR by package weight. The internal cartridge can be recycled and a new cartridge can be used with the same actuator and outer bottle. “These features reduce ARS’s carbon footprint and environmental impact,” says Bulla. “Most airless refillable packages on the market are simply a screw-off pump branded as refillable, without utilizing materials that are easily recyclable,” he says.
APC is currently co-developing a mono-material airless pump in an unusual size, with a national brand. “ARS is gaining ground, but I believe demand will explode when we reveal our all-PP mono-material airless pump engine,” Bulla says.
ECO Airless Bottles
CTK offers its Cream Pump line, featuring its Eco-Airless Pump—a springless, metal-free dispensing system.
“The pump is polypropylene,” says Paterno. “We are excited to launch a full range of sizes—from 5ml up to 50ml,” she says.
CTK’s Eco-Airless collection is based on the supplier’s patented technology that replaces the metal SUS spring. The pump’s evacuation system was also recently improved—and it can accommodate any type of product. “No viscosity is too high,” says Paterno. “This package can even pump out balms and toothpaste,” she says.
CTK’s in-house sustainability team consults with brands on decorating options to customize its stock lines. “We help to guide beauty brands on the various types of eco-friendly decorations to use, to ensure a package’s recyclability isn’t affected,” Paterno explains.
Premi Beauty Industries offers a collection of mono-material airless packaging in polypropylene called Airless Tech. Another collection, Nema, includes three slim transparent bottles in 15-, 20-, and 30ml sizes, which showcase the product inside. “We can customize our airless packages with different finishes,” Prestini says.
Refillable Airless Compacts
HCP, in partnership with Pum-Tech Korea, offers a variety of airless compacts with a refill format. A new innovation, the Portable Airless Jar/Compact, is a low profile, 30g pack that is ideal for liquid foundation or hybrid skincare-cosmetic products such as tone-up cream.
“All the Pum-Tech Korea Airless Compacts feature an airless dispensing system with a self-sealing orifice to minimize air contact for effective product preservation and to prevent liquid formulas from drying out,” explains Lu. “A precise dosage control of 0.2cc is achieved via a wide palette press, which features great product evacuation to limit waste,” she says.
HCP and Pum-Tech also offer “deco type” airless compacts, which feature a decorative film added to the palette for graphics and logos. “The film is applied via insert molding technology, so as not to have contact with the formula,” Lu says. “Alternatively, the palette can be vacuum metallized to give a luxurious metallic aesthetic,” she adds.
Aluminum Airless
Lumson offers its new TAL, ‘Techno Airless Aluminum’ —and the supplier says it is the first airless system with pouch technology in an aluminum container. TAL is recyclable, and the components separate easily. “It’s innovative, high-tech, and sustainable—and the perfect answer to the beauty market’s demands for maximum safety and sustainability,” says Priore. TAL is available in several sizes.
Lumson’s “Half Moon” pump, which dispenses a 500µl dosage, is a part of the TAL package, along with a multilayer pouch. “The pump stands out for its refined ‘design,” says Priore.
“Aluminum is a material that is extremely easy to decorate, and TAL can be easily customized with different decorations and finishes,” he says.
Refillable Airless—In Glass
Premi Beauty Industries offers airless systems in refillable glass packaging—and the team says it was the first to market this innovative airless design three years ago.
Premi’s top seller is its Airglass Slim Refill—an elegant, eco-friendly design. The airless package features a refillable glass bottle. “Our R&D and industrial design teams made sure the components easily separate for recycling,” says Prestini. Ideal for luxury makeup and skincare, it comes in several sizes and many types of customized decorations are available.
Creatives, trend specialists, industrial designers, and graphic designers all work together on package design and development in the Premi Studio. “We combine our production and decoration capabilities to create products that can stand out easily in the beauty market,” says Prestini.
What’s Next?
Will the need for airless packaging slow due to trends such as “waterless” beauty? Some brands are swapping body wash for bar soap, for example, in an effort to reduce packaging.
“The rise in solid beauty formulations doesn’t apply to every type of product,” says Premi Beauty’s Prestini. “Makeup and skin-care will always require the best type of package to deliver the best performance—and that is often an airless package,” he says. “But it is more important now to use less material and less packaging,” he adds.
The team at Quadpack is anticipating a rising demand for airless packaging, and will launch its new Canvas airless collection later this year. “We will offer new airless options and customization—we are on the verge of launching a disruptive technology, but we can’t release any details yet,” says Henry.
The team at APC is working on adding new sizes to its Airless Refillable System, including a 0.25ml and 0.50ml dose.
Prestini believes, “The demand for airless packaging will always be high. It provides all types of beauty products with greater functionality, safety, and a higher perceived value.”