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HS Code |
428959 |
| Product Name | Evening Vine Extract |
| Category | Herbal Supplement |
| Main Ingredient | Evening Vine (Botanical Extract) |
| Form | Liquid |
| Serving Size | 2 ml |
| Servings Per Container | 30 |
| Recommended Use | Take 2 ml daily with water |
| Shelf Life | 24 months |
| Manufacturer | Nature's Harmony Co. |
| Country Of Origin | USA |
As an accredited Evening Vine Extract factory, we enforce strict quality protocols—every batch undergoes rigorous testing to ensure consistent efficacy and safety standards.
| Packing | Sleek amber glass bottle, 50ml, with botanical illustrations and gold-embossed label reading “Evening Vine Extract — Pure Botanical Essence.” |
| Shipping | Evening Vine Extract is shipped in tightly sealed, FDA-approved containers to preserve potency and prevent contamination. Each package includes clear labeling and safety data sheets. Temperature-controlled options are available upon request. All shipments comply with applicable chemical transport regulations, ensuring safe and secure delivery to your specified location. |
| Storage | Evening Vine Extract should be stored in a cool, dry place away from direct sunlight and sources of heat. Keep the container tightly closed and store at a temperature between 15–25°C (59–77°F). Ensure proper labeling, and avoid exposure to moisture and incompatible chemicals. For safety, store in a well-ventilated area and keep out of reach of children and pets. |
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Purity 98%: Evening Vine Extract with Purity 98% is used in pharmaceutical formulation development, where it ensures optimal bioactive consistency and high therapeutic efficacy. Viscosity grade LV400: Evening Vine Extract with viscosity grade LV400 is used in cosmetic emulsions, where it provides uniform texture and improved skin absorption. Molecular weight 340 Da: Evening Vine Extract with molecular weight 340 Da is used in nutraceutical capsules, where it facilitates rapid gastrointestinal absorption and enhanced bioavailability. Melting point 175°C: Evening Vine Extract with a melting point of 175°C is used in heat-processed functional foods, where it maintains stability and preserves bioactivity during cooking cycles. Particle size 5 microns: Evening Vine Extract with a particle size of 5 microns is used in suspension concentrates for beverages, where it enables smooth dispersion and prevents sedimentation. Stability temperature 60°C: Evening Vine Extract with stability temperature 60°C is used in topical ointments, where it retains active compound integrity under storage and transport conditions. Solubility 85% in ethanol: Evening Vine Extract with 85% solubility in ethanol is used in tincture formulations, where it ensures clear solution and maximized extraction efficiency. Water activity 0.21: Evening Vine Extract with water activity 0.21 is used in powdered supplements, where it inhibits microbial growth and extends shelf life. |
Competitive Evening Vine Extract prices that fit your budget—flexible terms and customized quotes for every order.
For samples, pricing, or more information, please call us at +8615371019725 or mail to admin@sinochem-nanjing.com.
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Tel: +8615371019725
Email: admin@sinochem-nanjing.com
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Being close to the production line, we see each batch of Evening Vine Extract take shape from raw input to finished goods. We know every bit of plant source we receive, every solvent in our tanks, each filtration stage, and every subtle shift in aroma and hue that reveals the difference between a quality extract and a mediocre one. Evening Vine Extract has become a frequent request from formulators and R&D teams. It stands apart from traditional extracts, not just for marketing, but for the responsibilities it carries in formulation, process safety, and customer outcomes.
Growers harvest the vine in late summer, right after its flowers reach their optimal resin content. We work with farmers who avoid excess pesticides, since contaminant control begins in the field, not the lab. Upon arrival, we run samples for pesticides and heavy metals. If the vine doesn’t pass, it doesn’t touch our extractors. That’s our foundation: start with clean, consistent bulk raw material.
Most market extracts come in either watery or sticky batches, and their smell tells you everything. Ours delivers a clear, deep-toned mahogany liquid. High active content, low particulate residue, consistent rheology — a fingerprint unique to Evening Vine Extract from our facility. We don’t chase higher yield at the cost of solvent residue. Instead, all batches must clear acetone and alcohol levels far below industry regulatory standards.
What people first notice is the distinctive fragrance. Sharp, grassy, slightly spicy — not the sweet notes of morning vine competitors. This difference comes from our extraction temperature, which preserves phenolic volatiles but doesn’t carry through unwanted green notes. Customers who use it in skin creams say their base blends more evenly with our extract. Soap makers report less cloudiness in finished bars. These tangible production outcomes matter far more than abstract claims.
Chemists employed in this factory learn to trust their senses before they trust their sensors. We measure every lot for active constituent concentration on HPLC, and we check the chromatograms to catch odd peaks. By now, we know which profile works best for downstream users. Moisture content cannot top 2.2%. Bulk density in storage never varies by more than 3%. Most extractors offer only one concentration; we run two standardizations: the CV-35 grade (35% actives, standardized to phenolic content) and the high-load CV-50 (over 50% actives by HPLC check, used by professionals with process experience). No mystery blends, no “proprietary profiles” hiding low-grade lots.
We’ve learned the hard way that filtering protocols affect customer pain points. Cheap units permit over 250 ppm of plant residue, which causes gunk in spray nozzles. Advanced filtration we run brings that under 70 ppm. A small difference in a spec sheet, but a massive difference on a bottling line. Our own maintenance logs have confirmed this time after time.
What really counts is what happens once our extract leaves our site. One client, a mid-sized cosmetics plant, struggled for years with separation in their body lotion batches whenever they pushed higher concentrations of the extract. Switching to our Evening Vine, their batches passed the 72-hour stability test without basal separation. Another client produces solid shampoo bars. Early tests with other extracts left the bars crumbly, especially in dry climates. Our higher grade’s viscosity brings a pliable, stable end product, with no post-cure warping. Feedback like this comes straight to us, and we report it to operations for process tuning.
Soap makers worry about saponification interference. Our extract does less. It resists alkaline breakdown, keeping color and scent truer after cure. Pharmaceutical clients, always the most demanding, tell us our low solvent residue is the main reason they shifted to our supply. Since regulations keep tightening solvent limits, we run post-processing on every tank batch and discard any that fails internal parts-per-million checks. Our waste bill hurts, but our reputation stands intact.
Often, buyers ask what really sets Evening Vine apart from every other botanical on the shelf. Plant type matters, of course, but so does what you leave in or out during extraction. The most direct rival, Morning Vine Extract, uses the same base plant. Growers harvest it younger, with more sugars and fewer resins, so its aroma skews light and sweet. During extraction, most competitors push hard for yield, using high-heat shortcuts to rush to a finished product. Color runs paler, but active compounds take a hit, and solvent tailings linger.
Our Evening Vine Extract takes a slower, cooler extraction run, lasting several hours more. The result: a richer fraction profile with 30% more phenolics, reflecting the experience we’ve built over twenty years. Critically, the off-flavors and red-brown tints that show up in short-cycle extracts don’t appear here. Seasoned formulators have told us they can spot these differences blindfolded. At a molecular level, HPLC reads higher minor terpene content and undetectable residual acetone below 3 ppm, compared to 18 ppm average in generic extracts.
Some try to cut costs by blending their Evening Vine product with cheaper carriers—often glycol, glycerin, or worse, propylene carbonate. This dilutes the active load and complicates product labeling down the line. We sell no blended variants. Every drop of our extract comes straight from batch to drum, never extended. Our plant line runs 100% stainless and glass, and we pull regular samples to check for potential leaching of metals or cross-contamination. Not one barrel leaves the warehouse with cloudy, off-color, or excessive dissolved solids.
We handle almost all internal process steps, so clients get fresh material. Many resellers draw from six-month-old stocks. During pandemic supply strain, we kept stock fresh by scheduling shorter runs and rotating out excess. Shipping logs show average product age under 15 days at point of sale—a detail customers with high-turnover needs appreciate. Value shows up there in quality, not just price.
Each step of production throws up its own set of snags, and we’ve gone through every one. Storage tanks sometimes develop biofilm if temperature control drifts. We record tank temperatures three times each day, not just at shift change. Heating coils keep the extract above 24°C to prevent settling, but never reach above 40°C, or we risk phenolic alteration. Our team does hand checks for stratified product, not just digital sensors. Nothing replaces a trained technician with a glass dipper.
Batch consistency matters more than a few decimal points on a certificate. Once, we lost a whole shipment when a miscalibrated pump let too much pre-wash solvent through the system. Our operators called it before QC did—off-smell, and the batch never left our dock. These mistakes sting, but they teach us to be vigilant. Every new intern smells the difference between a good load and a solvent-tainted one by week one.
Some users want higher customization: concentrated forms for tablet use, diluted forms for sprays. We run pilot batches, but don’t scale up if it means compromising mainline quality. Each tweak ripples through supply, storage, and extraction. Customers with special needs get direct support from our technical staff, and we often invite them to watch live production, so they trust what lands in their tank or tote.
Our job doesn’t end at production. We work with customer QC and R&D to speed successful scale-up. Many new users underestimate the impact of resin content and side volatiles in emulsion stability. Our tech team runs joint experiments—checking for phase separation, viscosity in end applications, and scent interaction with common surfactants. In one project, a natural deodorant startup kept seeing crystallization after shipping. We identified that their previous extract still had excess water content. We fine-tuned the drying step, and the next retrofit batch passed their 90-day shelf test in both hot and cold environments.
This hands-on support makes a difference, especially for independent formulators or OEMs with no in-house chemist. Phone lines go direct to plant management, not through shields of sales reps, and we share every aspect of batch data they need. If a client’s machine clogs, or a product gets recalled, we comb through logs and send techs to observe. Even if the issue comes from downstream process, responsibility means tracking every concern.
Global disruption in raw material trade has shown how fragile supplies get for high-quality botanicals. Our extraction capacity is tied directly to the acres of contracted vines each year. If disease or flood hits a region, we know at once, because our field techs walk the ground with farmers. We store only as much as keeps the product fresh, never sitting on excess which might degrade in quality. During recent floods, we doubled our QC checks, rejecting vine lots with even slight mold or fermentation. It cost time, but our product entered no sickly-sour batches into circulation.
This tight loop from field conditions right up to tank load-out keeps our supply chain stable, with predictable output and minimized waste. In larger multinational supply networks, we see product bounce from handler to handler, raising risk of mixed lots and sudden spec changes. With us, buyers receive single-lot origin, chain-of-custody documentation, and a team willing to walk through the farm-level history if needed.
Inventory planning became more intense during the pandemic era. Freight delays could stall orders, but we managed by splitting shipments and storing backup inventory in climate-controlled local depots for strategic partners. Our facility holds backup power and filtration to guard against process interruptions—another lesson drilled by years of storms and outages.
Chemicals drawn from living sources require more than clean equipment. Every production day starts with a safety rundown, not just paperwork. Our staff inspect for cross-contaminant risk at shift’s begin and end. We run FDA and REACH compliance checks not by default, but because our partners in beverages and nutraceuticals insist on it. No batch ships without finished documentation for purity, composition, and trace residues as required in customer target markets.
If regulatory standards rise, we shift to meet them ahead of schedule. When European buyers lowered acceptable solvent limits last year, we commissioned an internal study and swapped out one step in our recovery protocol. The new batch read below all current international thresholds, and ongoing monitoring keeps us two steps ahead.
We treat safety as a shared process. We train all staff in emergency containment, and every year, we shut down production for a full safety drill—no exceptions. Our clients rest easier when they know incidents are rare, short, and reported immediately, with process documentation open to inspection.
Trends in natural and clean-label products keep shifting, and formulators grow more skilled at spotting shortcuts in raw chemical production. We invite feedback straight from user labs and production floors. Many small tweaks that now define our standard process—such as an extra carbon filter stage or revised storage pH—came from listening to real-world use, not just regulatory filings.
We keep up with extraction innovation, but hold to proven process guardrails. Current R&D focuses on lowering process water use without sacrificing yield, and we’re prototyping extraction with greener solvents. Each change undergoes live batch trials and customer pilot runs. If results don’t align with the reliable standards we’ve built over a decade, we roll them back, no matter the cost.
Waste management and environmental responsibility mean not just meeting legal minimums, but tightening our own standards. We treat plant and solvent waste with certified partners and keep a running tally of all process waste and solvent releases, even beyond what regulators demand. We submit these figures to long-term clients so they can meet their own sustainability objectives downstream.
No amount of automation replaces hands-on skill in producing a stable, true Evening Vine Extract. Seasoned staff have learned what an off batch smells and looks like before analytic machines blip an alarm. Many of us have built careers in this sector, with families who know the scent and stain of concentrated extracts in our houses. The trust our clients place in each drum and tote reflects years of attention, small corrections, and real pride in a job done well.
We host site visits, open our process to inspection, and share both our successes and the rare failures. Commitment to improvement means learning from setbacks and keeping lines open between production and each customer’s formulary workbench. Problems owned early mean less paperwork and better relationships in the long run.
End users care about the product in hand—the lotion, soap, emulsion, or supplement. They may never see our tanks or know the trouble that a split solvent line or poor field harvest causes, but that’s our business, not theirs. Our job is to deliver guaranteed Evening Vine Extract, batch after batch, reflecting every lesson learned from raw vine to finished drum. This means putting skill and ethics into daily action, not just spec-sheet compliance.
Buyers seeking shortcuts might not understand why Evening Vine Extract from a dedicated manufacturer comes at a premium. The answer lies in every layer of control, transparency, and support that allows our partners to work with confidence and speed. This isn’t maximum output at any cost; it’s consistent quality, built by people for whom every batch is personal. We’re not just suppliers but hands-on craftsmen accountable for what we ship. In an industry facing ever-greater regulatory and process pressures, that distinction matters now more than ever.