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AIBU

To complain about impenetrable packaging

(46 Posts)
baggythecrust! Thu 07-Jul-11 10:08:58

I think I'd have been tempted to melt it off on the barbecue!

Barrow Thu 07-Jul-11 10:06:16

The worst packaging I can remember were some b.b.q tools. Apart from the rigid plastic coffin the tools were also covered in a cellaphane shrink wrap which it was impossible to remove, even by tearing it off in small pieces!! I ended up throwing them away as I just couldn't get at them. I would have taken them back but bought them whilst on holiday and didn't think it was worth a 3 hour drive to return them!!!

yogagran Wed 06-Jul-11 22:29:03

Lakeland also sell the iSlice for £3.99. It is magnetic so I can keep mine on the fridge door. They also sell Jar Grippers which are a thin circular rubber pad to help opening jars and bottles

Elegran Wed 06-Jul-11 22:22:31

Thanks Twizzle. The packaging says Novartis Consumer Health, so I have written to them. If I get no reply I shall try Lornamead Group

twizzle Wed 06-Jul-11 19:08:29

Elegran Lypsyl is owned by the Lornamead Group.

You can email them at:
[email protected]

nanaval Wed 06-Jul-11 18:58:10

To release the vacuum on a sealed jar I find a sharp tap on a hard surface does the trick.

twizzle Wed 06-Jul-11 18:09:39

Thanks, will check out their website.

hellypelly Wed 06-Jul-11 18:01:24

twizzle, found tge catalogue. It's called iSlice and I got mine from essentialsbypost. Hope you find one. Now I need to find where I put mine!

twizzle Wed 06-Jul-11 17:41:43

That sounds like a really good invention.
Do you know what it's called hellypelly?

hellypelly Wed 06-Jul-11 17:37:02

I've got one of those. There's a new type that has a ceramic blade, doesnt cut skin but will do paper and plastic. I'll look up where to get them.

Elegran Wed 06-Jul-11 17:19:34

Betterwear have a thing for opening those rigid plastic coffins that they hang up small toys and electronic bits in. It is like a miniature Stanley knife in a protected cover. You pierce the packaging, then slide it along. Works well if you can remember where you put it away last time.

Instead of complaining to each other, how about we all email or write to these firms whenever we have to fight their packaging? They should have contact details somewhere on their product. I have posted my complaint about Lypsyl. Now its your turn.

susiecb Wed 06-Jul-11 17:13:09

Oh yes to all this!!! I cant get into packaging so I take a kitchen knife stab myself and cause cuts which bleed for days!!!

numberplease Wed 06-Jul-11 16:19:00

One of my pet bugbears is the packaging that comes with children`s toys. All the kiddie wants is to get at the new toy and play, but you need half a flippin` tool chest to get at the toy, which incidentally, would have fitted into a box half the size!

greenmossgiel Wed 06-Jul-11 15:28:00

I've just remembered the name of the little tool! It's called a 'Jar Key'. grin

greenmossgiel Wed 06-Jul-11 15:06:56

Lakeland do a great little tool! It connects to the edge of a sealed jar lid and when lifted (like a bottle opener) releases the vacuum, and the lid opens easily. Very inexpensive, too! smile

supernana Wed 06-Jul-11 15:03:22

Packaging from hell, I call it! Worst I can remember was a sandwich packed by M&S. 30 minute lunch break - attempted to open said packet - broke two nails - split corner of lip, bit end of tongue and was a cheap source of entertainment for passers-by. By the way, I failed to gain access to the contents until I stabbed the cellophane with a ruler...by which time, I was past caring! On a serious note...if there is a straightforward way to open anything wrapped, packed or stacked...with or without instructions, I have yet to master it.

Elegran Wed 06-Jul-11 14:48:42

baggytc - tried the elastic bands, but the thing is so small they did not make any difference. I've written the letter, can't email them as their website does not show an email address.

GillieB - I had good hands and fingers until a few years back. Then a few knuckles stiffened up one at a time and now since starting Femara it has spread over a few months to all knuckles and wrists and my thumb joints clunk painfully in the mornings. GP says Femara speeds up osteoporosis but not arthritis. I hae me doots.

Annika - so many things are sealed up so you can't get at them!

Annika Wed 06-Jul-11 13:51:05

Sissors... you buy them all packed up so that no one can run amock in a shop only to find that when you get home with them you need sissors to open the pack, now if you had sissors to open the pack would you have brought sissors in the first place .
I am now going to lie down in a darkened room all that thinking has brought on one of my "heads" confused

GillieB Wed 06-Jul-11 12:58:08

Elegran, I have got good hands and fingers and I still have trouble with things like this. You have mentioned my particular bugbear - writing so tiny that it can't be read. These days, even when things come with instruction leaflets, they are usually written in ten or so different languages (to save money, of course) and consequently the print is so small that it is less than useless.

baggythecrust! Wed 06-Jul-11 12:46:13

Go it, elegran! I sympathise entirely. There is a tip for helping with twist tops that I have found very useful: wrap elastic bands around the parts (or at least one of them). That gives you a much better grip.

Elegran Wed 06-Jul-11 12:06:41

I am about to fire off a complaint to Lipsyl. I've used their lip salve for ages and always found it hard work to open, but now that my fingers are arthritic, it completely defeats me.

First, it is displayed in rigid plastic on a cardboard backing, with a dotted line behind it that is supposed to break open under pressure. It doesn't. It takes kitchen scissors or determined tearing with strong fingers.

Then it is tightly wrapped in strong polythene, (with an ingredients list in a minute font, of course) There is another dotted line round the edge of the cap, with the instruction "twist". When I was younger, I could twist opposite ways with both hands and eventually make it open, after getting Chinese burns on my fingers. Now I can twist for 10 minutes, getting Chinese burns, painful fingers and aching wrists and the plastic is still firmly whole.

Handing it to DH does the trick, but even he is finding it harder to do, and he will not always be around.

A lot of their customers must have as much difficulty as me, or more!

There! I shall just copy most of this post and email it to them. Thanks for listening while I aired my opinion.