Bodico panty liners (without wings)

The product: Wingless panty liners by Bodico. I’ve only been using them for a short time, but I think I have enough experience now to give a review. Let me tell you about them.

First, the packaging: The upper 2/3 of the package is white, while the lower 1/3 is black, which is a fairly dynamic design for menstrual product packaging. The top has the brand logo, what type of product it is, whether they have wings or not, and that they are individually wrapped.

The top part of the Bodico panty liners package.
The top of the package. Photo by me.

The front has the brand logo, what the package contains, how many liners are in the package, whether they have wings or not, and the fact that they are individually wrapped (there is even a little illustration of a panty liner).

The front of the Bodico panty liners package.
Front of the package, featuring price sticker. Photo by me.

On the left and right sides (they’re identical) the type of product is listed, as well as the fact that they are unscented.

Side of Bodico panty liners package.
Side of the package. Photo by me.

The back also includes the type of product, as well as additional information about the product, and a warning to keep the plastic away from small children.

Back of Bodico panty liners package.
The back of the package. Photo by me.

The bottom is fully black and has disposal instructions for the liners, as well as a diagram, a warning to not flush the liners, the brand logo, some additional information about the company, and a barcode.

Bottom of the Bodico panty liners package.
Bottom of the package. Photo by me.

The colours blue, bright green, and hot pink are recurring in the words and design all over the packaging. Cool design, repetitive info. The words are small, so you may need glasses to read them. I won’t bother listing the measurements, because you probably want me to move on already.

The liners: There are 30 per package, which should last you about a month if you use one per day. They are indeed individually wrapped, in small plastic pouches.

Small, white, plastic pouch in which a Bodico panty liner is individually wrapped.
The back of an individually wrapped panty liner, in its plastic pouch. Photo by me.
Small, white plastic pouch in which a Bodico panty liner is individually wrapped.
Front of an individually wrapped panty liner, in its plastic pouch. Photo by me.

They are think and flexible, as far as panty liners go. The backs are sticky, and covered by a small strip of plastic-feeling paper, and the front sides are soft and feel almost cottony.

Small, white, unwrapped Bodico panty liner, with the plastic paper strip on the back. It's displayed lengthways.
The back of an unwrapped liner, with the plastic strip still on it. Photo by me.
Small, white, unwrapped Bodico panty liner, displayed frontways.
The front of the unwrapped liner. Photo by me.

My personal experience: The plastic pouches are slightly difficult to open, and tend to stick to the removeable plastic-paper strips, though since the strips are to be moved anyway, that’s not that big of an issue. I’ve also found that the top of the sticky sides tend to not stay in place, though I’ve had that issue with many pads and liners, so that just might be me. Still, these liners mostly stay in place, and move with me. They absorb fluid fairly well, and are indeed unscented.

Summary: Dynamic packaging, slightly irritating pouches, effective absorption. Pretty good, overall.

Recommended: If you have slight breakthrough bleeding, spotting, or a light flow.

Rating: 30 panty liners out of 30.

Like this review? Think I’m full of it? Feel informed? Vaguely amused? Leave a comment below!

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