Three tips to help graphic designers optimize their printed label creations

Del Williams.
Del Williams.

Here, Del Williams, a technical writer based in Torrance, California, looks at new substrate options and tools that enhance graphic appeal and streamline the creative process. He chats with Alan Jameson, Senior Manager of the Design and Prototyping Team at Avery Products Corporation.
While graphic designers work with a variety of visual media, designing printed labels for sheetfed HP Indigo and dry-toner digital presses, ideally on a print-on-demand basis, is becoming a vital part of their business and can be crucial to a company’s bottom line. Labels can improve a brand’s image, help a product to stand out in a crowded marketplace and determine shelf appeal. In retail, labels are the critical last link in the sales chain that conveys important product information while creating an emotional connection that compels the customer to buy. Labels can also be essential in branding an event – whether sports, civic, corporate, education or celebration related.
However, in a “me too” arena like labels, typical materials like white matte or semi-gloss paper will not differentiate graphic designers from the competition. Instead, the ability to offer unique, premium, attention-getting materials can help win them new business and make their customers look good. Functionally, such labels must also facilitate the printing process, as well as be easy for customers to apply. Today, new label substrate options and tools can not only enhance graphic appeal, but also streamline the design, printing, and application process while increasing quality and reducing cost. For graphic designers and digital design firms, here are three tips to help optimize their printed label business.

  1. Start with a quality substrate

The label substrate is as important to the quality of the label as the artist’s canvas is to a painting – even more so actually, because labels must look great despite transport, storage and handling in rough settings that paintings never have to endure.

Alan Jameson.
Alan Jameson.

“For maximum visual appeal, graphic designers require high quality label stocks that provide excellent print density and ink anchorage to produce full bleed labels that print bold colours and sharp, clear text to the edge of the label,” said Alan Jameson, Senior Manager of the Design and Prototyping Team at Avery Products Corporation, a leading national label brand. “The labels must also stick securely in potentially extreme temperatures experienced in transport, refrigeration, freezers, microwaves, or outdoor events with sun exposure, as the application demands.”
To ease the printing process, such labels should also work seamlessly and reliably with digital printers, with superior lay-flat properties. In order to facilitate this, according to Jameson, it’s a good idea to work with a label provider with a product that is tested by the OEMs and certified or verified to run in digital presses.

  1. Attract attention with eye-catching substrates

With limited shelf space in the market, however, graphic designers must attract attention to their clients’ products and services. To this end, there are a number of unique premium substrates available today that will help labels stand out from the competition. For example, to give any item a metalized look without the use of metallic ink, Jameson points to one of his company’s offerings – Silver Matte label by AveryPRO (Avery’s commercial printing label division). Such a metalized look, he says, often works well for high-end food, wine, beer, drink mixer, or even spa products, where the graphic designer wants to lend a feeling of ‘opulence.’ “To convey a premium feel, designers can try a full metallic finish with minimal text,” he added. “Or to create emphasis, they might print heavy blocks of black or a solid colour, leaving specific portions unprinted so the metallic area shines through – say for a knife logo design on a deli product label.”

AveryPro Silver Matte label samples.
AveryPRO Silver Matte label samples.

When high-end health, beauty and skin products need to stand out, Jameson suggests the company’s White Soft Touch labels, which have a special coating that gives them a velvety texture without requiring post-print coating, which reduces cost and speeds the label printing process. This type of finish has been available for magazine and book covers as well as packaging, but there’s nothing like it in the pre-die-cut, pressure-sensitive label market, he said. “Such a coating can serve as more than just a touchpoint to affect the feel of the label. It can be used to shape the customers’ perception of the product on which the label appears,” said Jameson. “Designers can also create some interesting tactile 3D effects using soft touch. For example, leaving the area within a feather shape unprinted so the consumer feels the softness of the feather, or printing a photo of moss that actually feels like moss.”
When a raw, handmade, or authentic look is desired, graphic designers can add it to products, packages, boxes, bottles and bags with a natural, organic-looking, Kraft Brown pressure-sensitive label. The label, which hearkens back to traditional, unbleached, natural materials, uses an FDA-compliant permanent adhesive so it’s safe for indirect food contact. Occasionally, graphic designers want to place a bright white label on a dark object like a wine bottle or box. The challenge, however, occurs when the dark object shows through the label, making it appear gray or off-white instead of bright white. In such cases, designers have the option of using a True-Block label, which has a blocking layer built into it behind the bright white face stock. Unlike typical labels that have a blue backing, this allows the white to maintain a cleaner look.

  1. Streamline the process

With commercial printers, using sheetfed digital printers that can produce high-quality short-run labels on a par with traditional long-run custom jobs, graphic designers now have a number of tools and options to streamline the label printing process, improve quality and cut costs. One way to significantly cut time and costs from the label printing process is to work with a label provider that offers quality pre-die cut stock of the most common label shapes and sizes. This eliminates the expense of dies and extra handling, allowing more of the budget to go into graphic design and effects.
“While label printing has usually taken from 3-5 working days, requiring considerable pre-press coordination (including ordering dies and choosing stocks), turnaround time can be cut to as little as same day if press time is available,” said Jameson. “If graphic designers provide the printer with a fully laid out press sheet, all they have to do is drop it in the print queue and wait for press time.” To save valuable pre-press time and accurately align products, graphic designers and printers should use free digital press tools and design templates. Such templates are intuitive and easy-to-use since they’re similar to those used on more common office labels. “With such design templates, there’s no guesswork,” Jameson added. “The graphic designer knows the label’s dieline, can create a design or multiple designs on the press sheet, and not worry about alignment or if it’s the correct die. Just download the template, lay out your design and you’re done.”
He added that to streamline the process, it’s best to use design templates that provide seamless integration, such as Adobe Illustrator extensions, with existing imposition software programs. Using design templates with correct dimensions and safe zones can also help to minimize waste and increase efficiency. While graphic designers can optimize their label business with such digital efficiencies, Jameson suggests easing the label application process for their clients as well. For instance, with Easy Peel labels users simply bend the sheet to pop up the label edge and peel. The sheet lies flat when finished without damaging the remaining labels. “When graphic designers take advantage of digital printing as well as the new label substrates, tools and options available, the result is a more eye-catching design in less time at lower cost and with fewer revisions,” Jameson concluded.

Tony Curcio
Tony Curcio is the news editor at Graphic Arts Magazine.

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