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Custom Printing

Color Psychology and Why it is Important to the Printing Industry

Image of female creative graphic designer working on color selection and drawing on graphics tablet at workplace
Image of female creative graphic designer working on color selection and drawing on graphics tablet at workplace.

Have you ever thought about what influences you to be drawn to purchase a product you have never physically held or seen? Is it the graphics? The aesthetic of the marketing campaign? The physical appeal of the models in the photos? The color palette of the design? All of the above?

The look of your marketing campaign can literally make or break your brand. But, did you know color can actually affect us physically and mentally, too? Psychologists refer to this phenomenon as color psychology.

Believe it or not, color affects us in ways most of us haven’t even stopped to think about before. It affects our moods and decisions, and can even affect our appetite and health. We will teach you a bit about color psychology so the next time you are planning a marketing campaign you can utilize psychology to sway your customers in the right direction.

The History of Color Psychology

The use of color to treat the mind and body has been practiced for thousands of years. The Egyptians were practicing color psychology way before the term “color psychology” was coined. They painted therapy rooms orange to lessen fatigue, purple to improve the skin, and blue to relieve pain.

Color has also been—and still is—used in one of the oldest holistic medicine practices in the world. This alternative medicine practice swears by using color to improve health by influencing our moods. With historical roots in India, Ayurvedic Medicine was developed more than 3,000 years ago, calling these mood-influencing colors doshas. Ayurvedic practitioners categorize people into three different doshas based on physical stature and each dosha is said to be influenced differently by different colors. Who needs Advil when we have color?

Although color has been used for therapy for thousands of years, color psychology was not actually studied until relatively recently. The first book on color psychology, Theory of Colors, was published in 1810 by German poet and artist Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. He wrote about the significance of different colors and how he believed different colors could trigger different emotions.

Scientists immediately rejected his theory because it was not backed by scientific research and was mainly based on his own opinions and insights. But, turns out he was onto something because since then, some of his insights have actually been validated by modern research. Who feels rejected now?

In 1942, neuropsychologist Kurt Goldstein tried to back Goethe with experimentation and scientific research, but his hypothesis was deemed inaccurate because he couldn’t get other scientists to back up his research either. But, his research has since played a massive role in modern color psychology.

Modern color psychology has consistently found scientific proof that color does indeed influence humans physically and mentally.

Researchers focus on three main areas when studying color psychology—color preference, physiological response to color, and effects of color on human emotion and behavior. Color preference is important for obvious reasons, if a person likes a specific color, they will be drawn to it. Researchers study physiological responses to color by measuring things like blood pressure, heart rate, and brain activity. To study the emotional effect color has on people, researchers use a psychological test called a semantic differential scale where they offer two adjectives opposite in meaning and are asked to place an object, in this case, color, where it belongs in relation to the adjectives presented. And to observe behavior, they run experiments to simply test and observe how different colors affect different choices and behaviors.

Why Color Psychology is Used in Marketing

Every color on the spectrum has been well researched and associated with different emotions. All the hard work has already been done, and you as a marketer can use this research to your advantage, and you absolutely should.

Studies have shown that 93% of buyers are influenced by visual appearance, and of that, nearly 85% are influenced by color alone.

For instance, if you think about yourself walking around a shopping mall don’t you think you would be way more likely to walk into a shop with funky colors and cool patterns rather than a store filled with beige and white clothes? Or imagine you’re walking around your city’s downtown, wouldn’t you think you’d be more inclined to stop and read, or even just notice a poster if it was vibrant and bright as opposed to one printed in black and white? 

Color is something you should always be thinking about when beginning a new marketing campaign. You can literally influence your audience with color alone. And although not every person is influenced the same way, there are a few general color theories you should be aware of.

Some Colors and What They’re Good For

The color wheel is generally divided in half creating two categories of colors – warm colors and cool colors. Each is associated with different emotions. Warm colors like red, orange, yellow, and light green provoke emotions such as passion, enthusiasm, energy, and happiness. Whereas cool colors like purple and blue and darker greens elicit calmness and professionalism. However, as much as you may really want to invoke something in your audience, it is not advised to overuse one side of the color wheel over the other; balance is still key.

Purple – Purple is most commonly known as the color of luxury, it’s viewed as regal and dignified. It is also associated with imagination and spirituality making a perfect balance between physical and spiritual. Being a cool color it is known to soothe and calm the mind bringing peace and confidence in decision-making to consumers. Beauty brands like Urban Decay, Aussie, and Tarte all use purple in their logos. Being associated with things such as luxury, imagination, and physicality, beauty and anti-aging brands often tend to sway towards purple.

Red – Red is a very powerful color, it’s a strong color, arguably one of the brightest. It is known to create a sense of urgency and is often associated with fear or love. Its energizing properties grab attention and hold focus. Red is also known to encourage appetite and is often used by fast-food chains. Think about Mcdonald’s, Chick-Fil-A, In-N-Out, Chipotle, and Pizza Hut, shoot, now that I’m listing them it’s harder to think of fast-food chains that don’t use red in their logo! 

Blue – Blue is arguably one of the most well-liked colors. It is associated with trust and security and is often used to represent tranquility, peace, water, and reliability. Men often prefer the color blue, so, if your main audience is men, think blue! Further, blue is the most common color used by companies in the corporate space. Think HP, Dell, Intel, and IBM.

Green – The color green is often used to promote balance and harmony and is generally associated with things like money, power, health, and nature. Green can stimulate tranquility within the brain and can lead to decisiveness among customers. Many eco-friendly or environmentally conscious brands use green in their branding, for the obvious reason that the most common color associated with nature and the environment is well… green.

Yellow – Yellow elicits joy, cheerfulness, and optimism. If you are trying to portray anything happy, yellow is probably the color you want to go with! Yellow can also be known to awaken the child in us, companies offering pleasurable, fast-accessible products or services often use yellow in their branding, companies like Mcdonald’s or Best Buy have benefited from using yellow in their branding.

White – White is often associated with purity and cleanliness. It can represent new beginnings and simplicity. As beautiful as it can be when used properly, avoid using too much white in marketing campaigns, as it can be seen as too minimal and boring.

Black – Black is used to portray things like seriousness, power, sophistication, or authority. Black, as a powerful color, can often be overused, and therefore misused. When used correctly black can look extremely sharp and powerful, but be sure to tread lightly.

While color plays a huge factor in the influence of your consumers, it is still important to remember all visual factors play a role in the success of your campaign. But now that you have color psychology in your toolbelt, your campaign can be that much more successful.

Drink Advertising and How Printable Media Makes It Happen

Hang Tag

Great advertising happens in the most subtle ways. It’s not the giant billboard ordering us to buy a product that has the biggest impact on our purchasing decisions, it’s the quiet tactics that seamlessly integrate into our daily routines.

Take a drink bottle for example. How many times in the past few hours have you taken a swig from your bottle or seen people around you do the same? Whether staying hydrated with water, waking up with a coffee, or enjoying something a little stronger, we all love our liquids. As a marketing vessel then, drinks are perfect—not only do we interact with them on a regular basis, but they’re also readily on display for the rest of the world to see.

Our experts explain how to best leverage drink advertising, how printable media makes it possible, and how it leads to bottomless brand opportunities.

Wait, I Can Advertise on Bottles?

It’s true! You can advertise on bottles, and it’s a pretty savvy marketing move to do so. A bottle is essentially a blank canvas for you to customize and ensure that your brand personality is as refreshing as the drink itself. You can opt to design and print specialized labels yourself to stick on bottles or you could partner with a drink company to be included on the labels they create. The latter option could be your logo, a joint competition, or a QR code directed to your website.

Literally, billions of drink bottles are produced and sold every year, meaning the scope for exposure with drink advertising is huge. And, considering that a print label is relatively inexpensive, you can see significant returns with only a small investment.

Ways to Do Drink Advertising

There are a number of routes you can take on your drink advertising journey. For example, you could choose to create a square label to print and stick on the bottle, you could make tags that sit on the bottleneck, or you could decide on a koozie, can, or bottle cover, that keeps the drink warm/chilled.

Whatever accessory you land on, be sure to stay consistent with your branding elsewhere by using the color, fonts, and messaging that is immediately associated with your brand. Don’t be afraid to be creative and playful – you could reference the fact that you’re advertising on a drink and tie your copy into the experience. For instance, your copy could mention that people might be starting their day with a caffeine boost, rehydrating at halftime during a sports game, or unwinding with a friend and a glass of wine.

That’s what makes drink advertising so powerful: it naturally slots into everyday activities.

Who Should Use Drink Advertising for Their Products?

Brooke Odell, our National Account Executive, says that drink advertising can be successful for any company. Melanie Handl, our Custom Solutions Team Lead, agrees, saying that drink advertising materials can be used by a lot of different industries.

“Hang tags and bottle neckers can be used for virtually anything in the food and beverage space, cleaning products, beauty products, and stand-alone items like toys and candles.”

Nathan Gardner, another National Account Executive, adds that co-branding with drink advertising is beneficial because you can leverage other brands’ audiences and reach. “If someone is loyal to their favorite drink, you can take advantage and present your brand on that bottle, which leads the consumer to associate your brand with their existing trusted choices, and increase the likelihood of them becoming loyal to you too.”

Making the Most of Your Drink Ads

Like any form of advertising, drink advertising is an excuse to get innovative and explore what best aligns with your brand DNA. Brooke recommends experimenting with bottle hangers that unfold and allow for more real estate to add information and artwork. She also suggests including a QR code to connect the offline and online experience and to maintain a clean label.

Speaking of clean, Custom Solutions Team Lead, Melanie Hall, believes that it’s important to keep things simple. “Make it easy to read or tell your product story through a great photo. Color can also help draw the eye when people are walking down an aisle in a supermarket.”

Elsewhere, Katie Shelton, our Ecommerce Sales Manager, says it’s worth spending a little more money on your label to get a custom die shape or a special finishing option. Remember, the more you can make your bottle stand out, the more of a lasting impression you’ll make with the person drinking (and the people around them).

Other ideas include branding the outer packaging of the bottle, such as the box or case packs, or to design label wraps, shelf talkers with coupons, and removable adhesive stickers. With these physical advertising bases, you could then introduce strategies like BOGOF (buy one get one free) offers, coupons for where the product is displayed, and peel-off promotions—all of which drive more, and deeper, brand engagement.

So, if you’re ready to quench your customer acquisition thirst, look to drink advertising.  Not only is it a lesser-known way to speak to customers, but it also comes with big exposure and big traction. Get started with our custom sticker and label printing services to ensure that your drink advertising makes a real splash.

Cheers!

Direct Mail Advertising: 4 Ideas to Make Mail Worth Reading

Direct Mail Marketing

In today’s digital world, your customers are inundated with online ads and email marketing campaigns. Almost 75% of consumers report feeling overwhelmed by email overload, and nearly 40% use an ad-blocking tool.

Digital marketing has its place. However, online ad fatigue makes it easy for it to get lost in the chaos. If you’re a brand interested in standing out, it’s time to get retro and reimagine an old-school marketing approach, direct mail advertising.

What is Direct Mail Advertising?

Direct mail advertising is a marketing strategy used to engage with your target audience offline. This form of advertising is physically delivered straight to your prospect’s mailbox, cutting out the clutter we see in the digital space. Direct mail advertising includes postcards, corporate swag, catalogs, or any other physical item a company wants to send prospects.

Why Direct Mail Advertising is an Effective Strategy

People Love Receiving Mail

Checking emails fills most folks with anxiety. However, visiting their mailbox has the opposite effect. In a 2020 study conducted by the United States Postal service, 65 percent of people said receiving mail lifted their spirits. Furthermore, your prospects actually want to hear from you via snail mail, with 59 percent saying they enjoy receiving mail from brands about new products.

Direct Mail Has a High Response Rate

Because you’re interacting with consumers in a memorable way, you’ll likely have a higher response rate than other digital channels. Ambre Zachmann an eCommerce Marketing Specialist at Printing For Less, says this is because of direct mail’s tangibility. “Your mail will nearly always be seen, but that’s not the case with your digital efforts. The nice thing about a mailer is that people tend to hold onto them and can easily refer back to them. We have had a number of customers who held onto one of our mailers and reached out months later. That is harder to do with digital.”

Direct Mail Has a High ROI

You may be surprised to learn that direct mail has a more reliable return on investment than other online mediums. The average ROI for a direct mail campaign is 29 percent, while the average ROI for display ads is only 16 percent. Melanie Handl, Printing For Less’s Custom Solutions Team Lead, notes that companies can expect their direct mail ROI to increase as they send more mailings to the same group of people. The more prospects interact with your brand, the more recognizable you’ll become.

Strategies to Make Your Direct Mail Advertising Interesting

Simply sending your prospects a note in the mail isn’t enough to ensure a successful direct mail advertising campaign. Like any other advertising medium, you need to be strategic with your approach. This starts by creating quality content. Below we’ve outlined our top tips for creating mail that moves prospects down the sales funnel.

1. Customization

Your prospects are bombarded with generic messages daily. If you want to differentiate yourself from your competitors, you need to take a different approach. Customers want to feel like they matter to your company. In fact, 80 percent say they’re more likely to buy from brands that provide a personalized experience. So, creating customized content is key if you want to set your direct mail advertising campaign up for success.

One easy way to personalize your content is by including your prospect’s name. This may seem a minor addition, but it has the power to make a huge impact. Studies show that simply adding someone’s name to your direct mail advertising can increase response rates by 135%.

2. Use a Powerful Image

The text you include in your advertisement is crucial. But the images you include are even more important. People can process images 60,000 times faster than text. This means you can portray a lot more information about your company with an image than with just words.

Since visuals are so important, Wes Kirk, our in-house mailing expert, recommends choosing images that represent what your company can do. “A photo of your contractor’s truck does not tell prospects how good your work is. Show before and after photos. Let them see what sets your firm apart from your competitors.”

3. Have a Clear CTA

Sometimes, marketers are so focused on compelling copy and engaging images that they fail to include a call to action (CTA). Without a clear CTA, your prospect won’t do anything after receiving your advertisement.

CTAs are short and sweet, so you need to get your message across quickly. Use command verbs like “order” or “download” to give your readers clear and specific next steps. To grab your reader’s attention, Ambre recommends making your CTA two times larger than the rest of your text.

4. Make it Part of an Omnichannel Marketing Approach

You’re probably not going to get a ton of traction if you only send your prospects one piece of mail. There’s an old marketing rule that says consumers need to interact with a brand seven times before making a purchase. But new research shows this number may be closer to 13.

Relying on direct mail alone isn’t going to get you the best results. Instead, make it part of your broader marketing strategy. Taking an omnichannel marketing approach uses a variety of mediums to interact with your customers. This helps create a seamless customer experience and gives them more opportunities to interact with your brand.

Cut Through The Noise

Online marketing is important, but if you really want to capture your customers’ attention, you need to take things a step further. Engaging prospects offline provides your company the opportunity to interact with them in a unique way. Need help creating high-quality mailers? Give us a call at 800-930-7978!

Print-Powered Small Business: MAP Brewing

Did you look down at the bar last time you sipped on a microbrew? More love goes into those coasters and menus than you may realize. Every last detail counts big when it comes to making happy customers. Small business owners know that better than most. That’s why we took a trip to Bozeman’s beautiful MAP Brewing to hear how print can impact your business straight from its founder, Dash Rodman.

Watch and learn how high-quality, custom printing can impact your small business, from coasters and menus, to table tents, packaging, flyers and more. Cheers!

Need help with your print? Talk to a live print expert today: 800-930-7978.

Plastics and Printing

Plastics and Print

We’ve added some real innovations to the printing industry in our 20 year history, and one that we’re really proud of is SmartFlex® paper. This is a synthetic paper that is made from plastic but has the same look, feel, and properties (well, the good properties) of regular wood-pulp.

We developed this paper stock and put it to use printing anything that needs to look perfect, but still be perfectly indestructible. How tough is SmartFlex? Well, here is a list of its superpowers:

  • It can’t be drowned – totally waterproof, your printed materials can go for a swim.
  • It can’t be torn – incredibly tear-resistant, you can’t accidently tear the edges of SmartFlex prints.
  • It’s always looks great – stain-resistance means coffee can’t harm it, making SmartFlex a great choice for menus.

Obviously, we love SmartFlex and we’re proud to bring innovation to the printing landscape. We also know how to print on plastic paper, winning tons of awards for our quality and customer service, but SmartFlex is just the tip of the plastic iceberg. There’s a whole world of plastics to explore.

Plastic Cards

Stand out with a plastic business card – perfect if you’re the sort of person that works on or near water or the outdoors. You can use affordable plastic cards to create your own membership cards, renewal cards, and personal entry or data cards. Think items like magnetic strips, barcodes, and personalization is out of your budget? Think again!

Take a look at plastic cards for a variety of uses if you’re exploring new marketing options. They can be added to direct mail sends or other printed pieces where they form a very official, tangible centerpiece. Plastic cards have an air of authority and can boost others’ perception of your company.

Menus and Brochures

Plastic paper like SmartFlex® really shines when it is used in a food and beverage environment. The plastic paper comes in different weights (sorta like thickness) that can be folded into familiar (or unique) menus. Just like regular paper, you can get SmartFlex in a variety of finishes and coatings – but no matter what you choose, you’re going to benefit from the waterproof and stain-resistant superpower of plastic paper. Not to mention, it’s basically indestructible so your customers won’t be banging up your menus, leaving them looking dingy and grubby.

Brochures, maps, and field guides are all great options for synthetic paper.

SmartFlex_Drink_Menu

Hang-tags

Hang-tags cover a range of items, from door hangers that can be used as marketing materials to ID or parking badges for hanging in, or on, a car. Hang-tags are often exposed to the elements and need to be protected from the weather. Plastics are a great idea, and if the plastic is coated with any type of protective coating, such as a matte finish, it will help reduce the effects of light fading the ink over times.

Thick Outdoor Plastics

Sometimes you need to go big or go home. The thickest types of plastic we print on is called Styrene. Made from composited layers of plastic, this material comes in a range of sizes and is so thick it can’t be folded, but it can be die cut and it prints very well. This rugged material can be used in outdoor promotional materials, window cards, lightbox signs, bus stop advertisements and anything that needs to take a serious beating.

Special Effects and Plastics

Because of the special way plastic reacts to ink, there are some printing effects that can’t really make it into plastic printing.

  • Pantone colors, or spot color can’t usually print on plastics (it would make them way too expensive).
  • Metallic foil doesn’t work well on plastics.
  • Embossing plastic cards, like a business card, is really only possible if you do a special font and restrict the embossing to just number and letters – perfect for something like a credit card, but you can’t emboss your logo.

Some effects look really, really good with plastics.

  • Plastics can fold very well, if they’re not too thick.
  • Die-cut plastics look fantastic.
  • Special UV effects and metallic foil tend to pop on plastics.

Plastics are an exciting new world for printing. Plastic printing is functional, beautiful, and plastics are completely recyclable. We are leading the industry in plastic-based papers.

Need help with your print? Talk to a live print expert today: 800-930-7978.

How to Use Special Printing Effects to Create a Unique Experience

While browsing a bookstore, I am like a crow with a bottle cap: I walk slowly, pecking around, until a shiny book jacket or spine catches my eye. The letters are debossed into the hardcover and filled with gold. I snatch it up, unable to help myself. That’s the one I want.

large colorful bookcase

People are naturally attracted to the item in the room that is the shiniest, the smallest, the greenest, the sharpest, the most bizarre or outlandish — anything different. Difference piques curiosity.

Perhaps it’s a reflection of our own social desires: we want to be seen as unique, too. Dale Carnegie in How to Win Friends and Influence People calls out the “desire to be important” as one of the top human needs.

We all want to think we are the book with the classy jacket.

Uniqueness may not be easy to cultivate, but it is absolutely worth the effort — especially in business. Think about it. Everybody has a platform these days. There are over 1 billion YouTube users, with videos on every topic imaginable. Businesses no longer just sell things. They are subject-matter experts, teachers, and even entertainers.

How can your print materials catch your audience’s eye? How can they establish or maintain your credibility, your place in the market?

To answer that, we’ll have to look closer at that little hardcover book I found at the bookstore.

Memorable Experiences Are Multisensory

The book that caught my eye didn’t just catch my eye — it caught my sense of touch, as well. The most memorable experiences are multisensory.

Here’s an example. Imagine reading a book about the Rocky Mountains. If the text is well-written, you may feel awe-inspired by the bigness of the mountains. You may be able to see, in your mind, the view from a peak as gigantic shadows of clouds drift across a purple range below you. You may be able to imagine the rush of a creek or recall the smell of pine trees from a former experience.

But when you actually hike in the Rockies, all five of your senses are engaged. The experience transforms you. It moves you to action: to plan another vacation, to bring a loved one on your next visit, or maybe even volunteer to build trails.

There’s a similar effect when we handle printed materials. When our vision is the only sense being engaged (like the written content about the Rockies in the first example), we do respond emotionally — but it’s nowhere near as powerful as getting to do the thing firsthand, where all five senses are engaged.

The Power of Special Printing Effects

How can you engage multiple sense with your printed materials?

It all comes down to special printing effects. It’s that extra little bit, like the frosting on the cake, that makes your piece complete and truly memorable.

While the education industry is constantly toying with visual and sensory techniques to aid the learning process, modern businesses are using the same techniques to increase sales. And they’re getting results. TV commercials have done this with color and sound for years, while malls often incorporate scent and taste to influence buyer behavior.

You can do the same thing with your print materials. Here are several ways.

Embossing and Debossing

An emboss or deboss changes the texture of paper by raising (or lowering) a relief of a design. You’ve probably encountered embossed content before: it’s almost impossible not to touch it.

“Tactile stimuli go much deeper than visual or auditory stimuli,” says Dr. Martin Grunwald, founder of Leipzig University’s haptic research laboratory. Studies on haptics (the sense of touch) show that we understand material deeper when we go beyond what’s visual. The sense of touch is both learned earlier and retained longer than the other senses.

Embossing Sample

“There is still an enormous development potential in the field of haptic advertising,” says Grunwald. One way to tap into this powerful effect is through embossing or debossing. It creates a 3D experience out of a 2D object, beckoning the viewer to use their fingertips to touch the embossed section as they take in the visual message simultaneously.

When to use an emboss or deboss: These are most popular on business cards, brochures, and luxury print items like invitations to create a lasting impression. However, they’re not restricted to any type of print project, and can be combined with color or left uncolored (a blind emboss) to create real works of art.

Die Cutting

If you’ve ever held a print piece shaped in some other way than a square or rectangle, you’ve probably seen a die cut. Die cutting uses a metal blade (the die) to “stamp” a custom shape out of a printed piece. It can function as a window on the front panel of a brochure, enticing the reader to open it up and see the hidden parts of the message inside.

Die Cutting Sample

Die cutting can also create standalone pieces in unusual shapes (stars, hexagons, or your logo, for example). Pop-up book creation includes die cutting to create the elements that rise off the page.

When to use die cutting: Enhance an image or words by framing them or making them stand out against another background. Die cutting can get expensive, so use it for luxury items or high-value sales opportunities.

Unique Inks

While embossing and die cutting can be left blind and colorless, the addition of other special printing effects, such as glimmering foil stamping, can attract the eye and prompt your customer to touch.

Ink can even increase the amount of time customers spend interacting with your piece, and ultimately, your brand. Glow-in-the-dark ink, for example, can only be revealed in the dark — meaning your customer gets to have a little fun before they get your ultimate message. Every extra second your prospect spends with your design strengthens their connection to your business or brand.

When to use unique inks: Foil stamping is ideal for invitations, luxury businesses, certificates or awards, and classy business cards. It’s natural for customers to assume higher quality or elegance when they see a foil-stamped item. It looks expensive, and so the customer associates quality and class with your brand.

As for other unique inks like Pantone colors, metallic inks, and bioluminescent ink, the sky’s the limit. As long as these effects fit your message and brand identity, they’re sure to create a lasting impression.

Scratch-and-Sniff

It’s not just for the kids anymore. Scratch-and-sniff print designs excite your customers’ olfactory sense, which is nearly impossible to do in any other way. Despite having the ability to detect one trillion unique scents, humans haven’t yet incorporated anywhere near that many description words into our vocabulary for aroma. So don’t describe your bakery’s new item in a postcard: let the customer experience it through their own sense of smell.

When to use scratch-and-sniff: If you’re selling food, beauty, or bath products, scent plays a vital role. But aromatic advertising isn’t limited to specific industries. A holiday promotion at any company might do well to send out mailers that smell like fresh-baked cookies — or a kids’ clothing company could get great results from providing fun scratch-and-sniff promotional stickers.

Real Experiences Are Rare

When you put it all together, one thing is clear: real experiences are rare these days. Though the internet and technology as a whole has improved our productivity and allowed us to connect in a million new ways, our other senses long to interact with the world, too.

We still get a surge of joy when we taste, smell, and touch physical objects around us. And often, these are the feelings that last — and truly inspire us to take action. “Whereas visual and acoustic perceptions fade very quickly, tactile qualities create an important reinforcement of the stimulus.” This quote from the European Promotional Products Industry’s website (eppi-online.com) paints the perfect picture of the role special print effects play: tactile, and multi-sensory, experiences stick.

Like the bottle cap in the grass or my book on the shelf, your advertising too can sport an attractive flair in shape, texture, and visual appeal through various forms of special printing effects.

Need help with your print? Talk to a live print expert today: 800-930-7978.

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Printing for Less

info@printingforless.com
100 P F L Way, Livingston, MT 59047

800-924-2041

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