Quilted Cosmetic Pouch RFQ / Cotton and Vanity Case Program
A quilted cosmetic pouch or vanity case program should not be quoted from one product photo alone. For beauty brands and private-label teams, the RFQ needs to define style count, quantity per style, fabric route, padding, quilting pattern, all-over print or color route, lining, zipper, packing and sample approval before bulk production.
Build the brief around styles, quantity and sample proof
Quilted cotton pouches and structured vanity cases can belong to the same launch program, but they should not be sampled as one generic bag or one fixed print. The pouch depends on fabric, padding, print or color route, zipper feel and packed shape. The vanity case depends more on structure, compartments, handle, lining and bulk protection.
- Best RFQ signal: style count, target quantity per style, artwork repeat, fabric route, padding feel, lining, zipper, trim color, packing and launch schedule.
- Risk to avoid: approving the print art before checking quilting scale, seam allowance, zipper curve and packed shape.
Quick Buyer Summary
This guide is for B2B buyers sourcing quilted cosmetic pouches, quilted makeup bags or vanity cases for a custom beauty, wellness or retail program. Send style count, quantity per style, artwork repeat or color split, fabric route, padding feel, lining, zipper, trim color, packing and sample approval expectations before asking for a final quote. A clear brief helps Rivta judge whether the project should use a soft pouch route, a structured vanity case route, or a split development plan.
Best fit
Beauty, personal-care, wellness and retail buyers planning custom quilted pouches or vanity cases at real production quantity, especially when artwork, all-over print, handfeel and sample approval matter.
Less suitable
One-piece personal-use requests, stock wholesale searches, no-artwork inquiries, lowest-price-only projects, or buyers who cannot share style count, quantity range or intended use.
Why quilted cosmetic pouch RFQs need more detail than standard pouches
For a standard makeup pouch, the buyer may start with size, material, zipper and logo. A quilted pouch adds more decisions: padding thickness, quilting pattern, stitch density, fabric shrinkage, print alignment, seam allowance and how the final bag looks after packing. If these details are not discussed before sampling, the first sample may look close but still fail the brand's handfeel or artwork expectation.
Start from the product family on custom makeup pouches and vanity cases and large organizers. If the project is part of a broader beauty launch, compare the route with custom cosmetic bags before confirming the sample plan.
Separate soft pouch, structured pouch and vanity case routes
The same collection brief can lead to different development paths. A soft quilted pouch may be approved by handfeel, print or color balance and real contents fit. A vanity case needs structure and compartment testing. A mixed program may need two sample rounds instead of one.
RFQ fields buyers should send before quotation
| RFQ field | What the buyer should send | Why it matters for sampling |
|---|---|---|
| Style count and quantity | Number of styles, target quantity per style, color split and launch timing. | Controls MOQ route, material purchase, artwork setup and whether styles can share construction. |
| Fabric and padding route | Cotton, linen cotton, recycled cotton, rPET, velvet or other route; desired padding thickness and handfeel. | Controls quilting result, shape, cost and sample approval standard. |
| Artwork, color and texture route | Repeat pattern file, color target, solid color split, texture reference and placement preference. | Quilting and seam allowance can interrupt artwork or change perceived color/texture. The buyer should check the actual panel shape and quilting scale. |
| Construction details | Finished size, gusset, zipper, puller, piping, handle, lining, pockets and label position. | Controls whether the sample works as a pouch, organizer or vanity case rather than only looking attractive in a flat view. |
| Packing and market handoff | Unit packing, hangtag, sleeve, carton mark, barcode need, delivery country and retail or e-commerce channel. | Packing affects shape, perceived value and final presentation. If retail identification is needed, align the buyer's barcode/GTIN process with GS1 GTIN guidance1. |
Sample approval checklist
- Check whether the quilting pattern is balanced after the pouch is sewn, not only on the flat printed fabric.
- Review padding thickness by handfeel and packed shape; too much padding can make zipper curves bulky.
- Confirm artwork or color balance around seams, zipper ends, gusset panels and corners.
- Test lining, pocket depth and zipper opening with the real contents or a contents list.
- For vanity cases, check lid height, compartment layout, handle pull, divider fit and packed protection.
- Confirm color split, MOQ route, packing and sample changes before asking for a final production price.
When buyers should ask for separate samples
If the project includes both quilted pouches and vanity cases, do not assume one approved sample covers the whole line. The pouch sample can prove fabric, print or color route, quilting and zipper feel. The vanity case sample should prove shape, compartments, handle, divider, lining and packing. When the products belong to the same launch, the sample review should still check how each structure behaves separately.
For a multi-style launch, send one consolidated brief with separate comments by style. That lets Rivta review which details can be shared across the program and which details need independent sample approval.
Ask Rivta to review a quilted pouch or vanity case RFQ
Send style count, quantity range, artwork or color direction, material route, target size, reference sample if available, packing and launch market. Rivta can review whether the project should start with a soft quilted pouch route, a structured vanity case route, or a split sample plan.
FAQ
What should a buyer send for a quilted cosmetic pouch RFQ?
Send the finished size, target quantity per style, fabric route, padding preference, quilting pattern, artwork repeat, logo or label position, lining, zipper, trim color, packing and launch timing.
Can quilted pouches and vanity cases use the same artwork?
They can share an artwork or color direction, but each structure should be checked separately. Quilting, seam allowance, gusset shape, lid height and compartments can change how the artwork, texture or color appears.
Is all-over print harder than a small logo?
It needs more review because print scale, color, panel cutting and quilting can affect the final look. Buyers should approve artwork on the actual sample route before bulk production.
What quantity should buyers share before sampling?
Share the estimated quantity per style and expected color split. This helps the factory judge material purchase, sample route, MOQ feasibility and whether several styles can share construction.
When is a vanity case better than a quilted pouch?
Choose a vanity case when the buyer needs stronger shape, compartments, handle, protection or organizer use. Choose a quilted pouch when softness, fabric feel, artwork and flexible beauty storage are more important.
Sources
GS1: Global Trade Item Number guidance. Used only for retail identification and barcode handoff context. ↩

