\n\ubc14\ub514 \uc2a4\ud504\ub808\uc774 (Body Mist)<\/td>\n 3\u20138%<\/td>\n 15\u201325%<\/td>\n Crystal PET or PETG TX2001H (verify)<\/td>\n 100\u6beb\u5347\u3001150\u6beb\u5347\u3001200\u6beb\u5347<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n<\/div>\n<\/section>\n<\/p>\n\n7. Korean Fragrance Brand Qualification Protocol: From T-01 to Approved Supply<\/h2>\nKorean fragrance brand qualification testing \u2014 the filled crystal PET stability test (40\u00b0C, 12 weeks) is the critical gate that distinguishes qualified Korean ISBM fragrance suppliers from those who supply without stability validation. Korean fragrance brands that skip this test and release to Korean e-commerce production have discovered PETG stress cracks at Korean consumer return rate of 8\u201315% at 4\u20136 months post-purchase \u2014 a brand damage event that no Korean ISBM producer or Korean fragrance brand wants to experience.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\nKorean fragrance brand qualification for ISBM containers follows a structure similar to Korean K-Beauty serum qualification but with specific tests relevant to fragrance chemistry: alcohol compatibility, mist pump function under fragrance conditions, UV fragrance stability, and Korean e-commerce transit simulation. The qualification timeline for Korean accessible tier fragrance (KRW 25,000\u201360,000 per 50ml): 3\u20135 months. Korean prestige fragrance (KRW 80,000+): 6\u20139 months due to additional UV stability and 12-month ambient stability requirements.<\/p>\n
Korean fragrance qualification test protocols by phase: T-01 (design verification, 10\u201320 bottles, visual and dimensional only \u2014 haze, neck OD, pump-head crimp engagement). T-02 (first article, 200\u2013500 bottles, full specification test including: haze at 3 heights \u00d7 4 orientations, neck OD cylindricity, mist pump crimp pull-off force \u2265 45N per Korean Cosmetics Association closure specification, filled bottle alcohol compatibility 6-week accelerated at 40\u00b0C\/75% RH with haze re-measurement \u2264 +0.3% change, mist spray uniformity \u2014 10 sprays per bottle, weight per spray \u00b15% of target). T-03 (filled stability, 1,000 bottles filled with actual fragrance formulation, 12-week at 40\u00b0C\/75% RH and 12-week ambient Korean temperature\/humidity cycle, UV xenon arc 200 hours on filled bottle for fragrance olfactory comparison by Korean fragrance brand\u2019s perfumer). T-04 (Korean e-commerce transit simulation, 50 filled bottles per ISTA 2A protocol for Korean courier conditions \u2014 zero leakage required after transit simulation).<\/p>\n<\/section>\n
<\/p>\n\n8. Sustainability and Korean Fragrance ISBM Lightweighting Strategy<\/h2>\nKorean ISBM fragrance bottle weight comparison versus glass \u2014 at 79% lighter than glass equivalent, Korean crystal PET ISBM fragrance bottles reduce Scope 3 packaging carbon intensity by approximately 65% per unit (PET production carbon: ~2.15 kg CO\u2082\/kg versus glass: ~0.9 kg CO\u2082\/kg, but glass is 4.7\u00d7 heavier per bottle). The total lifecycle carbon advantage of Korean ISBM PET fragrance over glass is quantifiable and growing in importance for Korean fragrance brand ESG reporting under Korea\u2019s KOSPI 2 voluntary sustainability disclosure framework adopted by Korean listed companies including Amorepacific Group, LG H&H, and Korean fragrance conglomerate brands.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\nKorean fragrance brands are under increasing ESG pressure from Korean institutional investors (Korean National Pension Service ESG investment requirements, Korean Financial Services Commission sustainability disclosure guidelines) and Korean Gen Z consumers who actively evaluate Korean brand sustainability credentials on Korean platforms including Kakao and Naver. Korean ISBM crystal PET fragrance packaging provides three sustainability communication advantages over glass that Korean fragrance brands are beginning to activate in their Korean ESG reports and Korean consumer marketing:<\/p>\n
\nCarbon intensity reduction:<\/strong> A Korean 50ml ISBM PET fragrance bottle (25g, using 25g PET at ~2.15 kg CO\u2082\/kg) has an embodied carbon of approximately 54g CO\u2082. A Korean 50ml glass fragrance bottle (120g, using 120g glass at ~0.9 kg CO\u2082\/kg) has an embodied carbon of approximately 108g CO\u2082 \u2014 2\u00d7 higher. For Korean fragrance brands producing 1M units\/year, switching from glass to ISBM PET reduces packaging carbon by approximately 54 tonnes CO\u2082\/year \u2014 a K-ETS-eligible emission reduction that generates approximately KRW 0.97\u20131.19M\/year in Korean carbon credits at 2026 Korean KAU prices of KRW 18,000\u201322,000\/tonne.<\/li>\nKorean e-commerce breakage elimination:<\/strong> Korean glass fragrance breakage in Korean courier transit creates both financial waste (the broken product) and physical waste (broken glass mixed with liquid fragrance in contaminated Korean courier packaging that cannot be easily recycled). Korean ISBM PET\u2019s zero breakage rate under Korean courier conditions eliminates this waste stream entirely \u2014 Korean fragrance brands can quantify this as zero-breakage waste in Korean ESG reports alongside the carbon intensity reduction.<\/li>\nKorean rPET content path:<\/strong> Korean post-consumer recycled PET (rPET) from Korean bottled water and beverage containers is available at the cleanliness specification required for Korean non-food-contact fragrance container applications. Korean fragrance ISBM at 20\u201330% rPET content is technically feasible (crystal clarity impact: haze increase \u2264 0.3% at 20% rPET from a food-grade rPET source with IV \u2265 0.78 and rigorous colour sorting) and satisfies Korean EPR (Extended Producer Responsibility) recycled content targets that Korean Ministry of Environment is progressively implementing for Korean cosmetic and personal care packaging. Korean fragrance ISBM producers who qualify a 20% rPET production process can offer Korean fragrance brand customers both a verified sustainability data point (20% recycled content) and a 8\u201312% PET resin cost reduction at current Korean rPET pricing versus virgin PET \u2014 a dual commercial and sustainability benefit that is difficult for glass packaging to match.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<\/section>\n<\/p>\n\n\u5e38\u89c1\u95ee\u9898\u89e3\u7b54<\/h2>\n\n
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Q1 \u2014 How quickly does PETG stress cracking occur in Korean alcohol-based fragrance, and what does it look like?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
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PETG stress cracking in Korean alcohol-based fragrance (EDT, EDP at 70\u201390% ethanol) follows a characteristic timeline and visual progression. Weeks 1\u20134 post-filling: no visible change. The ethanol is slowly diffusing into the PETG wall contact surface and beginning to plasticise the polymer at the interior contact zone \u2014 invisible externally. Weeks 4\u20138: a very faint cloudy band appears at the bottle base zone, visible only under 5,000K LED inspection at angles close to the bottle surface. This is the first visual indicator of micro-craze formation at the base, where residual ISBM orientation stresses are highest. Weeks 8\u201316: the base cloudiness intensifies and a circular opaque ring becomes clearly visible at the base perimeter \u2014 the primary craze zone. Fine crazes may begin to appear at the bottle corners (the most stress-concentrated points in rectangular Korean fragrance bottles). At this stage, the bottle is approaching the leakage threshold. Weeks 16\u201324: visible surface cracks at the base zone, corner crazes visible as bright lines under LED inspection, potential micro-leakage at the base zone when the bottle is held upright. The filled bottle\u2019s ethanol may begin to show a slight fragrance character change as craze zone polymer degradation products migrate into the fragrance matrix. Post 24 weeks: leakage occurs at the base zone under the static head pressure of the filled bottle, or at the corner crazes where the craze network has become continuous through the wall thickness. Korean consumers typically notice the leakage at 4\u20136 months post-purchase, by which time the bottle has transitioned from a display object to a returning-to-sender problem. The visual diagnostic: if the frosted ring or clouding at the base of a PETG Korean fragrance bottle is visible at 3 months post-fill, the container will leak by 6 months without exception. This is why the 12-week filled stability test at 40\u00b0C (which accelerates the ethanol diffusion rate approximately 4\u20135\u00d7 compared to ambient storage) is the minimum qualification test Korean ISBM fragrance producers must complete before committing to production.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n
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Q2 \u2014 What crystal PET resin IV specification is correct for Korean fragrance ISBM and why does IV matter?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
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Crystal PET resin intrinsic viscosity (IV) specification for Korean ISBM fragrance bottles should be IV 0.82\u20130.86 dl\/g \u2014 the same range as Korean high-performance beverage PET, not the IV 0.78\u20130.80 range used for Korean commodity beverage ISBM. IV matters for Korean fragrance ISBM because of two specific effects. First, higher IV produces a higher-molecular-weight polymer with longer chain segments \u2014 longer chains create more biaxial orientation chains (tie-chains connecting crystallite regions) per unit volume of oriented PET, producing a denser crystalline network with lower diffusion coefficient for ethanol. At IV 0.82, Korean ISBM crystal PET achieves 25\u201330% crystallinity after biaxial orientation; at IV 0.78, the same Korean ISBM process achieves only 18\u201322% crystallinity \u2014 the lower crystallinity creates more free amorphous volume available for ethanol diffusion, increasing stress crack initiation risk over the Korean fragrance shelf life. Second, higher IV reduces the rate of acetaldehyde (AA) generation at Korean ISBM barrel temperatures \u2014 at IV 0.82, the molecular weight distribution is narrower and contains fewer low-MW degradation products that generate AA at Korean ISBM processing temperatures. For Korean fragrance, AA at even 3\u20135 ppb headspace concentration is detectable by Korean fragrance brand perfumers as a \u201csynthetic\u201d or \u201cplastic\u201d off-note that degrades the fragrance\u2019s sensory profile \u2014 particularly damaging for Korean top notes based on clean aldehydic or floral compounds. Using IV 0.82+ resin and minimising barrel residence time (first-in-first-out discipline, no standing starts with material in the barrel) keeps Korean fragrance AA below the 3-ppb detection threshold that Korean fragrance perfumers set as their sensory acceptance criterion.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n
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Q3 \u2014 Can Korean ISBM crystal PET fragrance bottles match the weight and tactile feel of glass for Korean department store positioning?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
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Korean ISBM crystal PET fragrance bottles cannot match glass\u2019s weight at equivalent volume \u2014 a 50ml Korean ISBM PET fragrance bottle weighs 22\u201328g versus glass\u2019s 110\u2013140g for a comparable-geometry fragrance bottle. This is the fundamental limitation that prevents Korean ISBM PET from penetrating the Korean department store prestige fragrance segment (Chanel, Dior, Herm\u00e8s at KRW 150,000+), where the weight of the bottle in the Korean consumer\u2019s hand is part of the luxury product experience and is actively specified by international fragrance houses in their Korean retail display requirements. However, Korean ISBM can partially address the weight perception gap through three design strategies. First, bottom-weighted bottle design: a Korean ISBM fragrance bottle with a thick, solid-looking base section (achieved through a heavier preform gate zone producing 1.5\u20132.0mm base wall) and a heavy decorative aluminium or zinc alloy collar assembly shifts the filled bottle\u2019s centre of gravity downward \u2014 creating a weight perception that Korean consumers attribute to bottle quality rather than to the actual glass-versus-PET material distinction. Second, dense decoration: knurled surface texture, metallic in-mould labelling, or heavy electroformed decoration plates applied to the ISBM bottle exterior increase visual mass and tactile engagement without requiring the bottle material itself to be heavier. Third, retail positioning: Korean ISBM fragrance that honestly positions itself as \u201cpremium PET\u201d rather than \u201cglass equivalent\u201d \u2014 communicating sustainability credentials (35\u201345% lighter packaging, rPET content) and Korean e-commerce breakage immunity as positive differentiators \u2014 avoids the comparison with glass entirely and builds a distinct positioning that resonates with Korean sustainability-conscious Gen Z consumers in Korean online channels (Coupang, Kakao Shopping) where glass\u2019s department store luxury signals are irrelevant.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n
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Q4 \u2014 What production yield and scrap rate should a Korean ISBM producer expect for luxury fragrance crystal PET production?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
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Korean ISBM crystal PET fragrance production yield (ratio of bottles meeting all haze and dimensional specifications to total bottles produced) follows a performance curve that improves significantly with accumulated production experience on each specific fragrance format. For a Korean ISBM producer\u2019s first production run on a new Korean fragrance bottle format: expect 78\u201385% yield at nominal conditions, with the primary scrap causes being haze above specification at startup (before conditioning station reaches thermal equilibrium \u2014 first 15\u201320 minutes of each shift), neck OD at tolerance edge in cavities with the largest natural variation in the mould set, and visual defects (mould surface deposit from the previous run\u2019s resin, stretch marks at shoulder transition). By the third consecutive production run on the same format with consistent recipe and mould condition: expect 91\u201395% yield, as the operator builds format-specific expertise in conditioning zone management and shoulder transition optimisation. By the tenth production run with no mould polish degradation: expect 93\u201397% yield at an EV servo Korean ISBM platform with proper conditioning precision. Korean ISBM fragrance production yield is significantly lower (72\u201382%) on hydraulic platforms due to conditioning temperature variation \u2014 this yield gap, at Korean luxury fragrance container pricing of KRW 80\u2013150\/bottle, represents the quality cost basis for the EV servo machine investment payback that Korean ISBM producers entering Korean luxury fragrance supply calculate as a premium opportunity investment.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n
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Q5 \u2014 How does Korean indie fragrance brand production differ from Korean established brand fragrance packaging requirements?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
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Korean indie fragrance brands (\uc2a4\ud0c0\ud2b8\uc5c5 \ud5a5\uc218 \ube0c\ub79c\ub4dc \u2014 companies like Tamburins, Granhand, Phlur, and 40+ emerging Korean fragrance labels founded 2018\u20132025) present a distinctive commercial and technical profile for Korean ISBM packaging suppliers that differs from established Korean fragrance brands (Amorepacific \ud5a5\uc218, LG H&H \ud5a5\uc218 brands) in five important ways. First, minimum order quantity: Korean indie fragrance brands typically launch with 3,000\u201310,000 bottles per SKU per season \u2014 far below the 50,000\u2013200,000 bottles per SKU per season that established Korean fragrance brands order. Korean ISBM mould amortisation economics at 3,000-bottle run sizes require mould design choices that balance creative distinctiveness (the indie brand\u2019s design differentiation tool) against mould cost recovery (a custom mould at KRW 18\u201330M amortised over 3,000 bottles adds KRW 6,000\u201310,000\/bottle in mould cost alone). Solution: Korean ISBM producers serving Korean indie fragrance should maintain a library of 5\u20138 \u201cplatform\u201d bottle designs (standard shapes qualified for alcohol-based fragrance) that Korean indie brands can use with brand-specific labelling \u2014 reducing per-bottle mould cost by sharing mould amortisation across multiple Korean indie brands using the same platform. Second, speed to market: Korean indie fragrance brands launch to Korean trend cycles (Korean cherry blossom, Korean Chuseok, Korean New Year) that require 8\u201312 week total lead time from first design brief to filled product at Korean retail \u2014 versus Korean established brands\u2019 12\u201324 month lead time. Third, packaging creativity: Korean indie fragrance brands are disproportionately willing to specify unusual bottle geometries (hexagonal, organic oval, asymmetric taper) that large Korean fragrance brands cannot resource within their Korean international brand guidelines. Fourth, sustainability requirement: Korean indie fragrance brands are disproportionately likely to specify rPET, lightweighted, or refillable container formats \u2014 both for genuine sustainability conviction and for Korean Gen Z consumer communication. Fifth, payment terms: Korean indie fragrance brands are typically smaller Korean companies with tighter working capital \u2014 Korean ISBM packaging suppliers should structure Korean indie fragrance pricing as higher per-unit margin with shorter payment terms (30 days versus 60+ days for Korean established brands), compensating for the smaller volume and higher qualification cost per unit.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n
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Q6 \u2014 Is Korean ISBM fragrance production compatible with Korean fragrance refill systems?<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
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Korean ISBM crystal PET fragrance bottles designed for refill compatibility represent an emerging premium segment within Korean fragrance packaging \u2014 driven by Korean consumer demand for refillable luxury fragrance (which Korean consumers associate with both sustainability and value) and by Korean indie fragrance brands that use refill as a Korean brand loyalty retention mechanism. Korean ISBM refillable fragrance bottle design requirements differ from single-use fragrance in three specific ways. Structural integrity for multiple fill cycles: a Korean refillable fragrance bottle must maintain neck OD within \u00b10.04mm after 5 pump-head crimp-remove-re-crimp cycles (the minimum Korean consumer refill frequency) \u2014 requiring neck wall thickness \u2265 1.2mm at the crimp zone (versus 0.8mm for single-use fragrance) and neck steel specification H13 or 2316 stainless at the ISBM mould neck insert (rather than P20 which wears faster under the Korean refill volume production requirements). Alcohol-resistance longevity: a Korean refillable fragrance ISBM bottle must maintain structural and optical integrity after 5 complete fill-empty-refill cycles \u2014 the total ethanol contact time (5 \u00d7 2\u20136 months per fill) makes crystal PET IV 0.84+ (not IV 0.82) the correct specification for Korean refillable fragrance, as the additional IV provides better long-term orientation retention and barrier performance over the extended service life. Refill station compatibility: Korean fragrance refill stations (increasingly available at Korean \uc2e0\uc138\uacc4 and \ub86f\ub370 department stores for Maison Margiela Replica and Jo Malone refill programmes) dispense fragrance under positive pressure (typically 0.5\u20131.0 bar above atmospheric) \u2014 Korean ISBM refillable bottles must maintain seal integrity under positive pressure filling, requiring pump-head ferrule crimp qualification to \u2265 2.0 bar internal pressure hold for 60 seconds (the Korean refill station operating pressure plus 2\u00d7 safety factor). Korean ISBM producers entering the Korean fragrance refill segment should expect to invest in a specific qualification programme (KRW 3\u20135M) but will command KRW 150\u2013280\/bottle pricing for qualified Korean refillable fragrance bottles \u2014 3\u20134\u00d7 the pricing of equivalent single-use formats \u2014 from Korean fragrance brands building their Korean refill service ecosystem.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/section>\n
<\/p>\n
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Korean Fragrance ISBM Support<\/p>\n
Korean Fragrance ISBM Programme \u2014 Crystal PET Grade Selection, Alcohol Compatibility Validation, or Mist Pump Interface Engineering?<\/h2>\n Korean Ever-Power provides crystal PET IV specification, 12-week alcohol stability qualification, UV-blocking resin selection, non-round bottle geometry ISBM consultation, and Korean fragrance brand T-01 through T-04 qualification documentation for Korean fragrance ISBM production programmes.<\/p>\n
\u8bf7\u6c42\u9999\u6c34ISBM\u54a8\u8be2<\/a><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/p>\n\n\u76f8\u5173\u8d44\u6e90<\/p>\n
\n
\u9ad8\u7ea7\u9999\u6c34\u5e73\u53f0<\/span> \nHGY200-V4\u578b\u6ce8\u5851\u62c9\u4f38\u5439\u5851\u673a<\/span> \n\u6676\u4f53PET\u96fe\u5ea6\u8c03\u8282\u00b10.3\u00b0C\u22641.5%\u00b720\/400\u96fe\u6cf5\u9888\u90e8\u7cbe\u5ea6\u00b10.04mm\u00b7\u591a\u683c\u5f0f\u97e9\u56fd\u9999\u6c1bSKU\u5e73\u53f0\u00b7\u652f\u6301UV\u963b\u9694PET\u7a0b\u5e8f\u3002<\/span><\/div>\n <\/p>\n
\u5962\u534e\u9999\u6c1b\u7cbe\u51c6\u5ea6<\/span> \n\u6ce8\u5851\u62c9\u4f38\u5439\u5851\u673a HGY150-V4-EV<\/span> \n\u5168\u7535\u52a8 EV \u4f3a\u670d\uff0c\u9002\u7528\u4e8e\u6c34\u6676 PET IV 0.84 \u00b7 \u97e9\u56fd\u5962\u534e\u9999\u6c34\u96fe\u5ea6 \u22641.5% \u00b7 15\/415 \u8ff7\u4f60\u9999\u6c34 10ml\u201330ml \u7cbe\u5ea6 \u00b7 \u652f\u6301\u97e9\u56fd\u72ec\u7acb\u9999\u6c34\u54c1\u724c T-02 \u8d44\u8d28\u3002<\/span><\/div>\n <\/p>\n
\u5b9a\u5236\u9999\u6c34\u6a21\u5177<\/span> \n\u5b9a\u5236\u4e00\u6b65\u5f0fISBM\u9999\u6c34\u74f6\u6a21\u5177<\/span> \n\u77e9\u5f62\u548c\u975e\u5706\u5f62\u97e9\u56fd\u9999\u6c1b\u51e0\u4f55\u5f62\u72b6 \u00b7 S136 \u4e0d\u9508\u94a2\uff0c\u53ef\u957f\u671f\u4fdd\u6301\u629b\u5149\u8868\u9762 \u00b7 \u538b\u63a5\u9888\u90e8\u5706\u67f1\u5ea6 \u22640.08mm TIR \u00b7 \u9886\u53e3\u5ea7\u9762\u5e73\u6574\u5ea6\u8ba4\u8bc1\u3002<\/span><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/section>\n <\/p>\n\n\u7f16\u8f91\uff1aCxm<\/p>\n<\/footer>\n<\/div>\n
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ISBM\u5e94\u7528 \u00b7 \u9ad8\u7aef\u9999\u6c34\u5305\u88c5 \u00b7 \u97e9\u56fdISBM 2026 ISBM\u9ad8\u7aef\u9999\u6c34\u74f6\u751f\u4ea7\uff1a\u97e9\u56fd\u5236\u9020\u6307\u5357 \u97e9\u56fd\u9999\u6c34\u5305\u88c5\u662fISBM\u6750\u6599\u9009\u62e9\u4e2d\u6700\u5e38\u89c1\u7684\u9519\u8bef\u5e94\u7528\u9886\u57df\uff0c\u4e5f\u662f\u9020\u6210\u5546\u4e1a\u635f\u5931\u6700\u5927\u7684\u9886\u57df\uff1a\u56e0\u4e3aPETG\u5728\u97e9\u56fdK-Beauty\u7cbe\u534e\u6db2\u4e2d\u53d6\u5f97\u4e86\u6210\u529f\uff0c\u5c31\u5c06\u5176\u6307\u5b9a\u7528\u4e8e\u9152\u7cbe\u57fa\u9999\u6c34\u3002\u9ad8\u4e59\u9187\u9999\u6c34[\u2026]<\/p>","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_et_pb_use_builder":"","_et_pb_old_content":"","_et_gb_content_width":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[24],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-955","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-technical-deep-dive"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/isbm-blow-molding.com\/zh\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/955","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/isbm-blow-molding.com\/zh\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/isbm-blow-molding.com\/zh\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/isbm-blow-molding.com\/zh\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/isbm-blow-molding.com\/zh\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=955"}],"version-history":[{"count":2,"href":"https:\/\/isbm-blow-molding.com\/zh\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/955\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":957,"href":"https:\/\/isbm-blow-molding.com\/zh\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/955\/revisions\/957"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/isbm-blow-molding.com\/zh\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=955"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/isbm-blow-molding.com\/zh\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=955"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/isbm-blow-molding.com\/zh\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=955"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}