LASHMAITRE tray planning guide
Lash Tray Curl Length Mix
Plan lash tray curl and length mixes that are practical for salon use, ecommerce SKU planning and repeat wholesale orders.

How to choose a practical curl and length mix
A good tray mix should match the buyer’s service style and sales plan. Avoid trays that look complete but leave too many unused lengths in inventory.
| Check | Buyer question | Risk if missed |
|---|---|---|
| Curl | Does the curl match the brand style promise? | Wrong curl makes repeat orders harder to compare. |
| Length range | Are the lengths useful for real service work? | Unused lengths turn into dead stock. |
| Tray map | Is the row order easy to read? | Poor labels slow warehouse and salon use. |
| Reorder record | Can the same mix be repeated? | Unclear specs create batch inconsistency. |

Sample tray approval workflow
Approve the tray map with a physical sample. Keep notes for curl, length sequence, fiber feel, strip pickup and tray label wording before a repeat wholesale order.
Common planning mistakes
Buyers often choose too many lengths, copy a competitor mix without checking their own market, or approve a tray without documenting the exact reorder specification.
The inquiry path stays centralized and no new embedded form is added.

FAQ
Is a mixed tray better than single-length trays?
It depends on the buyer’s service workflow and sales plan. A mixed tray is useful only when most rows will be used.
Should buyers approve the length map by sample?
Yes. A physical tray helps confirm curl, row order, labels, strip pickup and fiber feel.
Can MOQ 50 work for tray mix testing?
Yes. MOQ 50 can help buyers test a focused range before expanding the SKU list.
Prepare samples before a bulk order
Share target styles, sample quantity, packaging needs and first-order range. LASHMAITRE will route the request through the existing inquiry path.
