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If you’re in Lakewood, California and you’re searching for slip sheets… here’s what that really means:
You’re moving product… and somebody is finally paying attention to the shipping costs that have been quietly punching your company in the mouth.
Because nobody “casually” shops for slip sheets.
Slip sheets show up when pallets are costing too much, taking up too much space, slowing down your docks, or getting you rejected by customers who don’t want wood coming through their receiving doors.
And in Southern California—where freight is expensive, warehouse space is expensive, and speed is everything—those small inefficiencies don’t stay small for long.
They multiply.
Slip sheets can be one of the cleanest ways to reduce shipping costs without reducing output.
But only if they’re specced correctly.
Because when slip sheets are wrong, they become a nightmare: tabs tear, loads slide, forklift operators hate them, and the whole program gets blamed like it was the idea’s fault.
It wasn’t.
It was the spec.
Let’s talk straight.
If you’re shipping out of Lakewood, you’re probably dealing with at least one of these pressures:
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You need to ship more product without paying for more trucks
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Your warehouse space is tight and staging is chaotic
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Your freight costs keep climbing and nobody likes the explanation
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Customers are demanding cleaner, standardized receiving
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Pallets are creating waste, breakage, and hidden costs
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Procurement is pushing for cost reduction without slowing production
Slip sheets can attack all of those—when they fit your operation.
What Are Slip Sheets? (Plain English)
A slip sheet is a thin, flat sheet—made from kraft paper, corrugated fiberboard, laminated board, or plastic—that sits under your unit load.
Instead of placing product on a wooden pallet…
You place it on a slip sheet.
Then a forklift with a push/pull attachment grabs the sheet by its tab (the “lip”) and pulls the load onto the forks.
That’s the whole concept.
Less wood.
Less weight.
Less bulk.
Less wasted space.
And in the right workflow, that translates into lower cost per shipment and better efficiency.
Why Lakewood Operations Use Slip Sheets
Southern California logistics is brutal in a simple way:
If you waste space or weight, you pay for it.
Slip sheets help because they can reduce the two biggest silent killers in freight:
1) Pallet weight
Pallets add weight that doesn’t make you money.
Slip sheets are dramatically lighter.
That matters across high-volume shipping.
2) Pallet bulk
Pallets steal cube and create dead space.
Slip sheets reduce bulk, which can let you load more efficiently in the right applications.
3) Pallet management headaches
Pallets break, splinter, stack up, get stolen, and become a constant “thing” your team manages.
Slip sheets stack flat and stay out of the way.
4) Customer receiving standards
Some customers don’t want pallets. Some want slip sheets. Some reject loads due to pallet inconsistency.
Slip sheets can help you ship cleaner and reduce receiving problems.
5) Better warehouse space usage
Pallet stacks eat floor space.
Slip sheets don’t.
If you’re tight on space, this matters.
Call or Text us at 832.400.1394 for a Quote!
Who Slip Sheets Are Perfect For (And Who Should Skip Them)
Slip sheets are a strong fit when:
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Loads are uniform and repeatable
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Loads are stable and properly wrapped
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You ship consistent volume
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You export or container-load
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Your customers prefer slip sheets
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You have push/pull capability (or you’re evaluating it)
Slip sheets can be the wrong move when:
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Loads are irregular, unstable, or constantly changing
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Your product needs pallet rigidity for protection
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You have no realistic handling method and don’t want one
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Volume is too low to justify a switch
A supplier who says “slip sheets work for everyone” is selling you a fairy tale.
Slip sheets work when the operation fits.
Slip Sheet Material Types (Pick Wrong and You’ll Hate Them)
Most slip sheet failures are material selection failures.
Here are the main types:
Kraft Paper Slip Sheets
Cost-effective and common.
Best for dry environments and moderate loads. Great for one-way shipments.
Corrugated Slip Sheets
More rigid and supportive than kraft.
Best when you need extra stiffness under the load due to product footprint or stacking demands.
Laminated Slip Sheets
Paper-based sheets with moisture resistance.
If humidity, condensation, or environmental exposure is a factor, laminated helps prevent sagging and tearing.
Plastic Slip Sheets
Durable, reusable, and strong.
Ideal for heavier loads, wet environments, or closed-loop systems where slip sheets return and get reused.
Plastic costs more upfront, but it can dominate long-term economics if reuse is real.
The Lip (Tab) Is Everything
Here’s the part most buyers don’t think about until the first pull fails:
The lip.
The lip is the tab your push/pull grabs.
If the lip is too short, too weak, or oriented wrong, you’ll see:
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Tabs ripping mid-pull
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Loads sliding and shifting
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Operators slowing down and fighting the process
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Dock congestion and wasted time
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Product damage and claims
Common lip configurations:
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1 lip (pull from one direction)
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2 lips (two-direction handling)
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3–4 lips (multi-direction handling)
We spec lips based on workflow, not guesswork:
Where do you stage loads?
What direction do you pull?
How do you load trailers/containers?
How does the customer receive it?
That’s how you prevent ripping and keep throughput high.
Do You Need a Push/Pull Attachment?
Most of the time, yes—if you want slip sheets to work smoothly at scale.
Push/pull attachments make slip sheets fast, repeatable, and predictable.
If you already have one, perfect.
If you don’t, slip sheets can still work for certain workflows (like container loading), but you need a real plan.
When you request a quote, we’ll help you determine:
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Whether slip sheets make sense for your workflow
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Whether the savings justify push/pull equipment
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What material and thickness match your loads
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What lip configuration prevents tearing
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What size is needed based on footprint
Because the goal is simple:
Less cost. More efficiency. No headaches.
Call or Text us at 832.400.1394 for a Quote!
What We Need to Quote Slip Sheets Correctly
To quote the right slip sheets (so you don’t waste money), it helps to know:
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Load dimensions (L Ă— W)
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Load weight (average and max)
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Product type (bags, boxes, cases, pails, etc.)
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Environment (dry, cold storage, humidity, export)
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Handling method (push/pull, manual, container loading)
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Monthly usage (or shipment frequency)
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Customer requirements (receiving specs, restrictions)
Don’t worry if you don’t have all of that.
Most buyers don’t.
We’ll ask the right questions and dial it in quickly.
Why CPP Is Built for Bulk Buyers
Custom Packaging Products is built for bulk buyers and big accounts.
That means:
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Bulk pricing that rewards volume
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Truckload efficiency that lowers landed cost
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Consistent specs so your operation runs smooth
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Reliable supply for repeat programs
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Straight answers from people who understand procurement and operations
We’re not built for small orders.
We’re built for programs where savings compounds.
The Bottom Line for Lakewood, CA Slip Sheets
Slip sheets can reduce shipping costs and improve efficiency without changing your product—only how efficiently you move it.
Less pallet spend.
Less pallet waste.
Less shipping weight.
Less wasted space.
More product per load (often).
Cleaner workflows.
But only if the slip sheets match your operation.
Wrong material = tearing.
Wrong lip = slipping.
Wrong handling plan = chaos.
Right spec = quiet profit.
If you want bulk slip sheets delivered to Lakewood, California, tell us what you’re shipping and how you handle unit loads—and we’ll quote a slip sheet spec that actually works.