What Our New Oregon-approved Labels Mean
You may have already started to notice updated labels appearing on some of our products.
Our CBD Isolate Oil Drops and CBD+THC 100:1 Oil Drops are already shipping with new Oregon-approved labels. CBD+THC 20:1 Oil Drops should follow within days. CBG Isolate Oil Drops will take longer, since those will transition as new packaging runs are needed. (All Oregon customers are already receiving the new labels across the product line. Outside Oregon, some products will transition sooner than others as packaging cycles continue.)
You will also begin seeing these updated labels reflected on our website as we roll out new product images across the site.
These changes were not cosmetic.
They reflect the work required to move products through Oregon’s labeling and registration process so that the label, the supporting documentation, and the product specifications all line up correctly.
One important point: the formulations have not changed
The product inside the bottle is the same.
What changed in some cases is how Oregon requires the serving information to be presented on the label.
For example, our CBD+THC 20:1 Oil Drops still use the same formulation, but the front label now reflects a 0.5 mL serving size rather than a 1 mL serving size. That does not mean the product was reduced. It means the label had to be adjusted to fit Oregon’s serving-limit rules while keeping the same formulation in the bottle.
That distinction matters. Customers may see a different serving statement and assume the product changed, when in reality the formula did not.
What changed
The new labels include the required Oregon-facing labeling elements for registered products, including the proper symbol and Label ID where applicable.
Those details matter because they show the product has gone through Oregon’s approval pathway rather than simply being sold with a generic label.
What had to happen behind the scenes
In Oregon, compliant hemp products sold to consumers must go through the state’s registration and labeling process.
That means label approval is not just a design step. It is a compliance step.
To get there, the label has to match the product, and the supporting documentation has to support what the label says.
Registered products are also submitted with certificates of analysis that are reviewed against the label claims so that the product, the testing, and the label all line up.
Why that matters
For customers, the practical takeaway is straightforward:
when you see one of our Oregon-approved labels, you are seeing a product that has gone through an additional layer of review.
That does not replace batch testing. It sits alongside it.
We still manufacture under Oregon Department of Agriculture oversight and test products before release. What the label approval process adds is another level of review of how the product is represented and identified.
Matching the label to the product
Cannabinoid claims are not just marketing language. They need to be supported by the product and the submitted testing.
That is one reason the review process matters. It helps ensure that what appears on the label is tied back to the supporting documentation for the registered product.
What customers can expect
As the new labels continue to roll out, some products will transition sooner than others. That does not mean the formulas changed. In many cases, it simply reflects where we are in the packaging cycle.
Customers will also begin seeing the updated labels reflected in our website product images as we roll out the changes across the site.
We are using the new compliant labels across the product line rather than maintaining separate label systems for different markets.
That keeps packaging, inventory, and fulfillment simpler and more consistent. It also helps to reduce unnecessary operational complexity that would otherwise increase cost without improving the product or service itself.
In practical terms, one clear label system is better for consistency, better for accuracy, and better for long-term efficiency.
Our current product line
You can explore our current lineup, including:
- CBD Isolate Oil Drops
- CBG Isolate Oil Drops
- CBD+THC 100:1 Oil Drops
- CBD+THC 20:1 Oil Drops
- CBD Isolate Topical Salve - Unscented
- CBD+THC 20:1 Topical Salve - Natural Unscented
Our goal is to keep product specifications clear, labeling consistent, and long-term availability as durable as possible.