CANTON BUYING DESK Official Quality Assurance Documentation · Kitchenware & Tableware Vertical
On-Site Acceptance Technical Protocol

Kitchenware & Tableware Quality Inspection Standard & Execution Protocol

Audience: Global buyers, QA managers, and on-site inspectors · Companion report: Kitchenware & Tableware Quality Acceptance Report

This protocol defines the vertical quality control execution standard for the kitchenware and tableware category, independent of the General Supply Chain Quality Control Specification, and governs standardized execution and recording of the Kitchenware & Tableware Quality Acceptance Report. Kitchenware and tableware products contact food directly and implicate consumer health and safety — there is no room for ambiguous judgment. The objective is not merely lot pass/hold disposition, but auditable, dispute-free data substantiating final shipment release for global clients.

1. Introduction & Core Operational Framework

As a Canton Buying Desk on-site QC inspector, your report and measurement instruments are the sole line of defense for client interests. When completing the quality acceptance report, apply three non-negotiable principles: objective truth, on-site tick-off, and on-site alignment. Subjective language such as “I think,” “approximately,” or “acceptable enough” must never appear in the report.

Objective Truth — Reject all conflicts of interest; accept no gratuities; record data objectively.
On-Site Tick-Off — Once defect counts reach or exceed the rejection number (Re), tick “FAIL/HOLD” on the spot. Private compromise with the factory is strictly prohibited.
On-Site Alignment — Rejection determinations must be reviewed and signed by the factory QA manager on site. If the factory refuses to sign, record this fact and report immediately to the Desk.

Unlike general industrial goods, kitchenware and tableware require category-specific judgment on food-grade safety, food-contact surface finish, and structural integrity & functional performance. Before completing the report, carry the client-issued Specification, BOM, and golden sample (if applicable). For AQL sampling and disposition methodology, refer to Section 3 of the General Supply Chain Quality Control Specification.

2. Visual Inspection Zone Classification Criteria

To standardize defect severity assessment, kitchenware and tableware products are divided into three visual zones. Inspectors must apply the industry-standard Zone A / B / C classification principle — do not treat all surfaces with equal severity:

Zone A · Primary / Food-Contact Surface
Strictest disposition

Definition: Inner surfaces that hold food (e.g., plate face, bowl interior, pot liner); direct mouth- or hand-contact areas (e.g., cup rim, cutlery tips, primary grip zones on handles); core brand logo print or laser-engraved areas.

Weight: Highest quality requirement. Any visible cosmetic defect in this zone is highly likely to trigger client returns and is typically classified as Major Defect (MA) or above.

Zone B · Secondary / Cosmetic Surface
Moderate tolerance

Definition: Outer sidewalls, bottom perimeter; inner handle areas, rivet and fastener zones.

Weight: Second-tier quality requirement. Minor process limitations that do not affect overall appearance may be accepted. A single polish scratch < 0.5 mm in diameter may be classified as MI.

Zone C · Non-Visual / Packaging Surface
Function-first

Definition: Bottom back-stamp areas (non-food-contact); inner packaging, color boxes, instruction sheets, barcode labels, and five-ply corrugated outer cartons.

Weight: Primarily assesses packaging information accuracy and protective strength. Minor corner creases or indentations may be classified as MI where function is unaffected.

Note: Visual inspection must be conducted under agreed standard illuminant (typically D65, approx. 6500K). Avoid dim warehouse or color-shifted lighting that may misread scratches and color variance.

3. Defect Classification & Severity Matrix — Kitchenware & Tableware Edition

Every non-conformity found on site must be assigned to exactly one of the following three categories. Subjective or ambiguous classification is prohibited:

Defect Level Code Kitchenware & Tableware Definition Common Examples AQL / Disposition
Critical Defect (CR) CR Violates mandatory regulations, food safety standards, or poses physical harm to consumers. Obvious industrial odor, machine oil smell, or mold (wood/bamboo items); unpolished metal burrs or sharp edges on cutlery, cookware rims, or cup mouths; severe ceramic/glass chipping; pot handle rivet failure or detachment; promised 304 stainless steel verified as 201 grade; missing mandatory food-grade markings on contact surfaces (e.g., FDA, LFGB, or fork-and-glass symbol) or material fraud. AQL 0 · One occurrence = entire lot Fail
Major Defect (MA) MA Impairs core function, materially degrades product grade, or will predictably trigger consumer returns. Non-stick coating, electroplating, or paint blistering, peeling, or scratching to substrate; plate/bowl base warping with wobble > 1.5 mm; visible handle cracks; stainless rust spots or oxidation staining; cross-hatch adhesion test Fail; color box capacity/material/barcode errors; wood/bamboo moisture content exceeding 15%. AQL 2.5 · Exceeding Re = lot rejection
Minor Defect (MI) MI No functional impact; commercially acceptable minor process imperfection. Zone B light polish scratches, tiny dents (< 0.5 mm diameter), minor water marks (glass); batch color variance within limit samples; minor color box corner creases; slightly lifted carton sealing tape. AQL 4.0 · Exceeding Re = lot rejection

CR · Critical

  • Food safety: odor, mold, material fraud, missing food-grade markings
  • Personal safety: burrs, sharp edges, chipping laceration risk
  • Structural failure: handle breakage, heat-induced melting
AQL 0 · Ac=0 Re=1

MA · Major

  • Coating delamination, flatness out of tolerance, excessive wood/bamboo moisture
  • Rust/oxidation, cross-hatch test Fail
  • Critical packaging print errors
AQL 2.5

MI · Minor

  • Zone B micro-imperfections, in-tolerance color variance
  • Zone C minor packaging creases
AQL 4.0

4. Report Module Execution Standards & SOP

4.1 Basic Profile & Sampling Parameters (Report Section 1)

Production Status Lock — Record bulk production progress and packaging completion rate. Wood/bamboo products must log measured moisture readings in the moisture check field (target 8%–12%; see Section 4.2 moisture SOP).
Arrival Verification — Before opening inspection, verify delivery note, PO number, and total carton count on site against the report fields for total lot quantity and total carton count.
Material Type Selection — Tick stainless steel, ceramic/glass, wood/bamboo, or silicone/plastic as applicable. This governs subsequent N/A determinations (e.g., thermal shock test applies to ceramic/glass only).
Sample Size Recording — Derive sample size n from lot quantity per ISO 2859-1 code letter; enter in the sample quantity field. MA and MI Ac/Re values must correspond to n (see Tables B and D of the General Supply Chain Quality Control Specification).
Carton Number Log — Reject factory-preselected “perfect samples.” Manually record inspector-designated carton numbers. Sampling path must cover front, rear, upper, lower, left, and right positions within the stack.

4.2 On-Site Testing & Physical Performance Verification (Report Section 2)

Before completing the report, the inspector must establish a dedicated test station on site and tick each item PASS/FAIL. Section 2 must be fully Pass before proceeding to cosmetic defect tally.

Odor Test (Mandatory Every Lot)

Cross-Hatch Adhesion Test

Thermal Shock Test (Mandatory for Ceramic/Glass)

Heat 5 samples in an oven or microwave: standard glass to 100°C; ceramic and heat-resistant glass to 140°C. Hold 30 minutes, then immediately immerse in 20°C water. Inspect under magnification for cracking. One cracked unit = FAIL for this test. Do not exceed 140°C on standard glass to avoid on-site shattering and misjudgment. Stainless steel, wood, and similar materials = N/A.

Outer Carton Drop Test

Wood/Bamboo Moisture Content Check

Stainless Steel Grade Verification On Site

Material fraud (CR level): Bulk goods promised as 304 stainless steel verified as 201 grade — one unit = entire lot Fail.

*Note: Inspectors must carry stainless steel grade test solution. For items without material certificates, perform spot electrolytic testing and observe color reaction (red within 10 seconds indicates 201 grade).

Additional Test Entry Points

4.3 Cosmetic Defect Recording by Zone (Report Section 3)

Record defects separately by Zone A/B/C. Tick defect level (CR/MA/MI), enter actual counts and Ac/Re limits (derived from sample size n per Tables B and D of the General Supply Chain Quality Control Specification), and tick item PASS/FAIL. Defect description fields must follow the structured reporting formula below.

4.4 Defect Tally & Final Disposition (Report Sections 4 & 5)

Structured Defect Reporting Formula: Defect description = Location + Symptom + Quantified Metrics

Correct example: “Of 125 sampled units, 5 samples show [coating blistering with fine pinholes (symptom)] at [Zone A inner bowl base (location)], with [blister diameter exceeding 1.0 mm and stainless substrate exposed (data)]. Classified as Major Defect (MA).”

Incorrect example: “Pots are bad quality, several defective.” — This format is not auditable and constitutes non-compliant reporting.

When completing Section 4:

Alignment & Signature Protocol

Once data triggers Re (rejection threshold), the disposition must be ticked “FAIL/HOLD” on the spot. The inspector must not privately compromise with the factory. Defective samples must be consolidated for review by the factory QA manager, who must sign the report.

If the factory QA lead refuses to sign, do not escalate into conflict on site. Record “Factory refused to sign” in remarks, capture video and defect photos immediately, and report to the client Desk for further instruction.

5. Integration with the General Supply Chain Quality Control Specification

When to Reference the General Specification

For AQL code letter lookup, sampling randomness, inspection stages (IPC/DUPRO/PSI), report structure, on-site five-step methodology, and standardized execution requirements, refer to the General Supply Chain Quality Control Specification.

When to Apply This Protocol + Acceptance Report

For pre-shipment inspection of stainless steel flatware, ceramic/glassware, wood/bamboo kitchenware, and silicone/plastic food-contact items, apply this protocol’s zone classification principles and kitchenware-specific defect matrix, and issue the Kitchenware & Tableware Quality Acceptance Report as the on-site sign-off document.