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For many beauty brands, especially in the competitive US and European markets, an eyeliner pen is often judged within the first few seconds of use.
Consumers don’t analyze the formula chemistry, fiber density, or capillary system inside the pen. They simply ask:
“Does it glide smoothly or not?”
And this is exactly where many cosmetic brands run into a frustrating issue:
The samples perform perfectly in development, but once mass production begins, problems suddenly appear — skipping, ink flooding, inconsistent flow, or even leakage during shipping.
This is especially common among indie beauty brands, private label startups, and fast-growing cosmetic companies launching eyeliner collections under OEM/ODM production.
Most brands initially assume the formula is the problem.
But in reality, the core issue is often hidden inside the eyeliner pen itself:
The reservoir structure.
This is one of the most common pain points in eyeliner manufacturing.
During the sampling stage, products are usually:
Hand-assembled in small quantities
Tested under controlled conditions
Shipped over short distances
Evaluated within limited timeframes
However, once products enter full-scale production, they experience:
Long-term storage
Ocean and air transportation
Temperature fluctuations
Pressure changes
Automated filling inconsistencies
Extended shelf time
At this stage, weaknesses in the internal reservoir system become highly visible.
Many brands focus heavily on:
Waterproof performance
Pigment intensity
Quick-dry effects
Brush tip softness
But overlook the actual mechanism responsible for stable ink delivery.
A high-quality liquid eyeliner is not just a cosmetic product.
It is a precision liquid control system.
Simply put, the reservoir structure determines how consistently and evenly the formula travels from the barrel to the tip.
If this internal system is poorly designed, brands typically encounter three major issues.
This is one of the biggest customer complaints.
The eyeliner starts smoothly, then suddenly stops delivering pigment midway through application.
Consumers end up shaking the pen repeatedly or pressing harder to restart the flow.
Common causes include:
Uneven fiber density
Poor liquid retention materials
Weak capillary transfer performance
Unstable air balance inside the barrel
Formula incompatibility with reservoir materials
Western consumers often prefer long, continuous eyeliner strokes, making stable flow even more critical.
If the reservoir cannot maintain consistent capillary delivery, skipping becomes unavoidable.
Another common issue is sudden over-release of liquid.
The pen works normally at first, then unexpectedly releases too much product at once.
This usually happens because of internal pressure imbalance.
It becomes especially problematic during:
Air freight transportation
High-temperature storage
Long-distance ocean shipping
Pressure fluctuations during transit
Without a properly engineered airflow control system, trapped pressure can suddenly force excess liquid toward the tip.
The result:
Ink flooding or “exploding” eyeliner tips.
For premium beauty brands, this immediately damages perceived product quality.
Leakage is rarely caused by just one defect.
It is usually the result of multiple structural weaknesses combined together.
These may include:
Unstable reservoir sponge expansion
Poor sealing performance
Inconsistent component tolerances
Weak valve structure design
Many factories can produce visually acceptable samples, but mass production introduces slight material variations that eventually create leakage risks.
This is especially important for US and European brands because cross-border logistics involve long shipping cycles and dramatic environmental changes.
Because producing a stable eyeliner pen is far more complicated than simply filling liquid into a barrel.
The real challenge lies in balancing:
Formula compatibility
Reservoir structure
Packaging components
Many suppliers rely on generic stock structures without optimizing them for specific formulas.
As a result, brands often experience:
“Perfect samples, unstable mass production.”
This becomes even more critical today because beauty consumers are increasingly sensitive to product performance consistency.
A single viral TikTok review showing skipping or leakage can quickly damage a brand’s reputation.
Professional eyeliner manufacturing requires simultaneous optimization of multiple factors.
Different pigment systems, film formers, and pearl particles directly affect liquid flow behavior.
If the formula is too thin:
Flooding becomes more likely
If the formula is too thick:
Ink skipping increases
The reservoir system must be carefully matched to the formula characteristics.
Many brands assume denser reservoir material is better.
In reality:
If density is too high:
Ink flow becomes weak
Skipping increases
If density is too low:
Ink releases too aggressively
Leakage risks rise
Precise balance is essential.
Most brands focus only on brush softness.
However, stable eyeliner performance also depends on:
Continuous liquid transfer
Fast recovery speed
Tip sharpness retention
Resistance to fiber splitting
Without proper recovery performance, even premium formulas can feel unstable during use.
This is one of the most overlooked factors in low-cost eyeliner manufacturing.
A properly designed airflow system maintains pressure stability inside the pen, reducing the risk of flooding and leakage after transportation.
Because modern consumers have very low tolerance for inconsistency.
Years ago, customers might accept occasional skipping.
Today, social media amplifies every defect instantly through:
TikTok reviews
Instagram demos
Unboxing videos
User-generated comparison content
For beauty brands, unstable eyeliner performance is no longer just a product issue.
It directly affects:
Customer retention
Brand trust
Repeat purchases
Online reputation
This is why more cosmetic brands are shifting their focus from simply achieving strong pigmentation to ensuring long-term structural reliability.
A strong cosmetic manufacturing partner helps brands reduce mass production risks before products even reach the market.
This is especially important for eye makeup categories such as:
Mascara
Eyelash growth serum
Liquid eyeliner
Brow products
These products all require highly stable structural systems to ensure consistent performance.
From formula compatibility and packaging integration to transportation stability testing, every detail matters.
GUER YOUNG specializes in eye makeup OEM/ODM manufacturing, including mascara, eyeliner pens, brow products, eyelash serums, as well as lip products, face makeup, and cosmetic care solutions. For beauty brands targeting the US and European markets, working with an experienced supplier means more than fast sampling — it means achieving reliable quality consistency during mass production, reducing after-sales risks, and building long-term brand credibility in a highly competitive market.
winnie.zhong@gueryoung.com
We have 10 years of experience, focusing on the development and sales of high quality eyelash growth serum, mascara, eyebrow gel, eyebrow color and other products. We also offer custom services, from tube
design to cosmetic fillings and packaging
Room 1, C3 Factory Building, No.8803 Zhuhai Avenue, Lianwan Industrial Zone, Pingsha Town, Gaolan Port Economic Zone, Zhuhai, Guangdong,China
andy.li@gueryoung.com
lynn.zhou@gueryoung.com
niki.xu@gueryoung.com