Letterpress Printing
Centuries-old relief printing that presses ink deep into soft cotton paper, leaving a tactile impression that no other process can replicate. The defining technique for luxury stationery.
Learn MoreEach printing technique has its own character — the deep impression of letterpress, the mirror-bright finish of foil, the subtle texture of a blind deboss. Most projects combine two or more of these processes. Here's what each one does and when to use it.
Centuries-old relief printing that presses ink deep into soft cotton paper, leaving a tactile impression that no other process can replicate. The defining technique for luxury stationery.
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A heated die presses metallic or pigmented foil onto paper, bonding it permanently with a mirror-bright finish. Available in gold, copper, silver, holographic, and dozens of other colors.
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Letterpress printing without ink — a plate is pressed into the paper to leave a visible impression with no color. Adds subtle texture and tactile detail that rewards close attention.
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A steel-rule die cuts each piece to a precise custom shape — rounded corners, arches, circles, diamonds, or fully custom silhouettes. The die is made once and kept on file for all future reorders.
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Digital printing in opaque white ink on colored papers and envelopes. The only reliable way to achieve bright, crisp white on dark stock — perfect for envelope addressing and dark-paper suites.
Learn MoreA typical wedding invitation suite might use letterpress for the invitation, foil stamping for the monogram, digital white ink for envelope addressing, and a creasing die to fold everything cleanly. We coordinate all of these passes in-house. Tell us what you're envisioning and we'll help you figure out the best combination.
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