Choosing a Printing Service for Your Project
As one of our oldest industries, there are scores of “printing” choices, but what are the differences in printing services and methods, and which is right for your project? There are three key factors that will help you determine what type of printing service is right for you and your budget: Quantity, quality and production speed. Here’s a rundown on the types of printing services and their relative pros and cons.
Standard Business Printing Services and Methods
Desktop Printing

Digital Printing

Special, high-end digital printers are used for large format printing, such as for large posters and vinyl banners.
Offset Lithography

Learn more about offset printing, the type of printing we use for most products at PrintingForLess.com
Offset presses are either “sheet-fed” with individual sheets or paper or “web-fed” with rolls of paper. Sheet-fed presses are generally used for short to medium runs of standard business marketing printing, while web presses are most cost-effectivene for high-run commercial printing, usually of magazines, catalogs and books (around 20,000 quantity or more) and for newspaper printing.
Printing Services Compared
| Standard Printing Type | Quantity – lowest unit cost | Quality | Production Speed |
|---|---|---|---|
| Desktop printing | Less than 50 pieces | Good | Immediate |
| Digital printing | 50-250 pieces | Good | 1-4 days* |
| Offset lithography | 250 or more pieces | Excellent | 2-6 days* |
Take some time and ask yourself: What matters most to you on your print project? The size of your marketing campaign, your company’s image and quality needs, any looming deadlines and your target recipients’ expectations are important considerations to weigh when you are looking for the best printing service match for your project.
Other Printing Services
Gravure Printing
Rotogravure presses are the fastest and widest presses in operation and are mostly used for huge industrial runs of magazines and direct mail catalogs.
Engraving, Thermography, Flexography and Screen Printing
Engraving is used on fine stationery, while thermography is a lower-end process that creates an engraved or raised printing effect. Flexography is generally used on packaging, such as food labels and can be used for printing on non-paper mediums such as plastic, metallic films and cellophane. Screen printing services are used for T-shirts and billboards.