5 Recyclability Tips For Your Packaging
When selecting single-use packaging for your cafe or restaurant, the general rule is that paper is always better than plastic.
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When selecting single-use packaging for your cafe or restaurant, the general rule is that paper is always better than plastic.
Ready to sprinkle in some branding at your bakery? Consider using these 4 items in your shop to have your packaging look as good as your treats taste:
Whether a vacation or a staycation, enhance your guests home away from home. We’ve gathered up 4 customizable takeaways for your hotel so memorable that your guests may just pack them up to remind them of their trip long after they’ve gone home.
Whether dining in or taking out, branded details can make your restaurant stand out. We’ve rounded up 5 products to add a little oomph to your presentation even if it’s just takeout at home.
In a sea of stylized photos of pancake stacks, coffees and matcha, you’ll want to stand out. Here’s 3 items you’re going to need to make social media feeds, “For You Pages”, and get added to that list of need-to-try spots.
Trying to build out the buzz over your new bar? Add your branding to these 3 items as a way to show your identity with a twist.
Between PMS, CMYK, HEX, and RGB, it can feel like you’re reciting the alphabet and it can all get confusing quickly. Where Pantone and CMYK are for printed materials, HEX Codes and RGB Codes are both ways to represent colors digitally, by using different number systems.
With some types of high speed production of printing ink on paper, it can take time to get your printed artwork ‘up to spec’ to where it looks good enough to be approved by the press operator. And this can take less or more time than anticipated.
‘Halftones’ is a printing technique used in many printing processes (including offset, flexo and screen printing) that uses a series of small, closely spaced dots to create the illusion of a gradient.
Offset printing is a technique in which the image is transferred, or “offset,” from a printing plate to a rubber blanket to the paper. It’s called "offset" because the ink is not transferred directly from the plate to the printing surface, as it is with something like letterpress printing.