If you're planning to ship more than just a few decks, better to go with a box and added padding. Nothing will beat the protection a box will provide, but if you wrap your small deck shipments in cardboard before tossing them in the bubble mailer, you've essentially made a box in the bag, right? Best thing to remember, whatever method you're using, is that nothing should move or shift around inside - the less it moves around, the better the survival chances.
And if you ship internationally, forget the mailers. Gotta use a box. International mail takes a serious beatdown, especially when using First Class or below. Anything less than a box is a gamble. Wrap it like you're building a fortress!
Don,
We're planning on doing a Kickstarter for our deck and will be mailing out (hopefully) hundreds of decks.
Is there an easy way to pack them with the cardboard?
I'm quite used to cutting boxes for cardboard to sandwich comic books for mailing, and it is incredibly time intensive. If there are any tricks (good sources of cardboard), firmer mailers, or good mailing boxes, I'm all ears.
Thanks.
Corrugated cardboard is available on rolls (from small to huge). While it doesn't have the strength of 'solid' cardboard, it does provide some protection from 'both worlds' (cardboard and bubblewrap). I sometimes use this to protect decks inside a padded bag - or, I bubble wrap them so they look like candidates for the next 'michelin-man' ... before popping in bag.
Here (in Oz) the post office has a cardboard CD mailer
(guessing quite similar to your U-line boxes), which is great for shipping single decks
(playing cards). I wrap the deck in brown paper first and then seal the package with enough packaging tape to make it 'like a fortress'. For anything other than a single deck, I wrap in brown paper, add plenty of bubble wrap and ship in boxes, or... use the combined cardboard, bubble, padded bag method.
I do know packaging takes time - on days when I have more orders I can spend half the day tangled in tape...
If you plan to ship large quantities where 'time-saving' becomes a real factor, there are packaging companies who provide custom 'solutions' (think wine industry, electronics, etc) - If lucky, you could find something both affordable and light-weight for your packaging ... A quick search brought this one up:
http://www.smartkarton.com/the-smart-karton-boxes/ ... I have no idea if they're good, bad or seriously expensive - but is this sort of what you had in mind?
I agree with Don and Fes - wrap your package like you expect people to be (almost) jumping on it while in transit ...
*wave*