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title: Say No to Plastic Coating! An Analysis of Aqueous Coating and Eco-Friendly Finishing for Water and Smudge-Resistant Packaging
lang: en
source: https://mindsprt.dev/en/knowledge/eco-friendly-print-finishing/
---

# Say No to Plastic Coating! An Analysis of Aqueous Coating and Eco-Friendly Finishing for Water and Smudge-Resistant Packaging

*Industry Insights · 4 min read · 2026-07-05*

> For paper packaging to be truly eco-friendly, the biggest bottleneck is often the protective plastic film.
This article breaks down the protective performance and processing constraints of aqueous coatings and eco-friendly water-based coatings, helping you find the optimal balance between tactile quality and full paper recyclability

**Quick answer:** For paper packaging to be truly eco-friendly, the biggest bottleneck is often the protective plastic film

## Why Does Paper Packaging Always Struggle with 'Full Recyclability'?

The main culprit preventing paper packaging from being fully recycled is the grease- and water-resistant plastic coating or BOPP film on the surface. To overcome this obstacle, MINDS Printing often recommends switching to aqueous coatings or next-generation eco-friendly water-based coatings to increase the ratio of mono-materials right from the source.

Aqueous Coating: A water-solvent transparent coating applied evenly to the paper surface after printing and then dried. It provides basic smudge resistance and light water repellency without affecting the paper's original recyclability.

Lately, many brand clients have come to me, asking right off the bat how they can make their product packaging 100% recyclable.

There is a common misconception that simply using kraft paper or recycled pulp guarantees eco-friendliness.

However, I usually ask them to scratch the surface of the carton first. If a thin, transparent layer peels off, then no matter how natural the paper material is, it will still end up as waste at the recycling plant due to this BOPP (Biaxially Oriented Polypropylene) plastic film.

This film is indeed highly functional—it resists scratches and repels water, and its visual texture can be adjusted using glossy or matte finishes.

But if we want to achieve zero-plastic, we have to rethink our approach to surface finishing processes.

## How Do We Handle Smudge and Water Resistance After Removing the Plastic Film?

Without the BOPP film, designers' biggest fear is that the packaging will pick up fingerprints during transit or even get ruined by raindrops.

Currently, the main alternatives on the production line are aqueous coating and UV coating.

Aqueous coating provides a thin, transparent protective layer with decent smudge resistance; even if it gets slightly wet, wiping it off quickly will prevent the paper from immediately deteriorating.

Visually, it preserves the natural, porous texture of the paper. Compared to the plastic sheen of traditional glossy films, modern brands actually prefer this natural, understated semi-matte finish.

If a product requires stronger protection, we evaluate spot or overall UV coating.

UV coatings cure instantly under ultraviolet light, offering higher hardness and gloss than aqueous coatings, along with more stable wear resistance.

However, the composition and thickness of UV coatings still pose some obstacles to recycling. On the spectrum of pure full-paper recyclability, aqueous coating remains the cleanest solution at this stage.

## Cracked Edges and Exposed White Lines During Box Folding? How SMB Manufacturers Can Tackle This

Changing the surface treatment shifts the real challenge to the downstream die-cutting and box-folding lines.

Without the reinforcement of a tough plastic film, paper fibers are highly prone to breaking along crease lines, exposing the white paper base underneath.

This is a fatal visual defect for packaging with solid, dark-colored prints.

Based on MINDS Printing's practical experience, avoiding the 'cracked edge' landmine requires strict adherence to MINDS' Three Pillars of Plastic-Free Packaging:

・Material Selection: Avoid poor-quality coated papers with short fibers that break easily, and use thick paperboard with a high proportion of long fibers instead.

・Creasing Process: The creasing blade during die-cutting must be finely tuned according to paper thickness. It is better to prototype a few more times than to crease too deeply and severely damage the paper.

・Color-Avoidance Design: During the prepress review, we advise designers to leave crease lines white or avoid heavy, dark color blocks like deep blue or black that easily highlight cracked edges.

## Food Safety and High-Barrier Requirements: Can Eco-Friendly Water-Based Coatings Deliver?

If it is a food-grade lunch box or packaging requiring long-term grease and moisture resistance, aqueous coating alone will definitely not suffice.

In the past, this domain was dominated by PE plastic coating, but now a new option has emerged on the market: water-based barrier coatings.

This technology applies water-based polymer resins to the paper surface, which dry to form a dense, water- and grease-resistant barrier layer.

The benefit is that this resin layer can be completely broken down during the pulping process, successfully passing through the screens of recycling systems.

Based on production line testing over the past few months, when packaging typical hot cooked meals or fried foods, the oil resistance of water-based barrier coatings is already very close to that of traditional PE films.

Furthermore, seaweed-based coating technologies developed abroad by companies like Amcor and Kelpi are attempting to replace petrochemical ingredients with marine biomass materials.

When clients have a sufficient budget and extremely strict food safety requirements, I recommend having the MINDS Printing Academy consulting team intervene directly. We establish a comprehensive defense line, spanning from virgin unbleached paper and eco-friendly inks on non-contact surfaces to water-based barrier coatings.

## Key Takeaways

・Aqueous coating can replace plastic lamination to provide basic protection, preserving the paper's natural feel while being highly recyclable.

・Eliminating the lamination film makes folded boxes prone to cracked edges, which can be overcome by selecting long-fiber papers and fine-tuning the die-cut creasing process.

・To meet high grease and water barrier demands, eco-friendly water-based coatings now provide protective performance comparable to traditional PE films without disrupting paper recycling.

## Final Thoughts

For designers and print buyers, plastic reduction cannot stop at just replacing paper materials; surface finishing is the final mile that determines whether packaging can truly be reborn.

As aqueous coating and eco-friendly barrier coating technologies mature, we should integrate recycling mechanisms into our design criteria right from the initial planning stage.

Rather than worrying about how to remove that film after finishing the artwork, it is better to confirm the processing limits of aqueous coatings with the printer from the start, telling the story through the material's own pores and natural luster.

## FAQ

### Without glossy or matte plastic film, is the carton surface easily scratched?

After switching to aqueous coating, smudge resistance and basic scratch protection are still present, but its resistance to friction from sharp objects is indeed inferior to BOPP plastic film. This needs to be compensated for with good packing and collision-prevention design.

### Will aqueous coating affect the saturation of the original printed colors?

Once the aqueous coating dries, it absorbs slightly into the paper, making the colors appear somewhat more muted and understated compared to glossy lamination. We recommend conducting digital or on-press proofing before mass production to confirm any color discrepancies.

### For hot food packaging requiring grease resistance, is aqueous coating alone sufficient?

No. Aqueous coating only provides light water resistance. For packaging hot food, you must upgrade to eco-friendly water-based barrier coatings with high-barrier properties or virgin greaseproof paper to block high-temperature oils from penetrating.


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