Letterhead

Letterhead
Letterhead

A well-designed letterhead shows customers they're dealing with an organization with an attention to detail. A poorly designed or outdated letterhead can have the opposite effect. Use your letterhead to create an image your customers can feel comfortable trusting.

  • Create a simple black-and-white letterhead for faxes, while reserving more colorful ones for sales letters and business correspondence.
  • Smoother, high-quality paper stock creates a strong and professional impression.
  • Letterhead isn't just for business. Consider creating a personalized letterhead for your correspondence to family and friends.

Letterhead

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Letterhead
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  1. Enter Quantity
  2. *Size

    Standard

    Executive Monarch

    European

  3. *Color Options

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    Which color option should I choose?

    Letterhead is typically printed one-side, with the back of the sheet left blank. The back side can be printed, too, however, for added effect. Since a letterhead often provides a first impression for your company, color choices are important. Corporate colors are most commonly used to reinforce a brand.

    Two-color printing, as its name implies, uses two ink colors. One is typically black, but it doesn't have to be. One-color printing uses just a single color of ink. Again, black is most common, but you can choose a different color if you prefer.

    A full-color letterhead can provide a very high-class look and feel. However, if your budget is tight, a well-conceived two-color or even one-color design can prove an acceptable alternative.

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    Front: Full-Color
    Back: Unprinted
  4. *Paper Choices

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    70 lb. white opaque is a common, cost-effective paper stock.

    70 lb. Hammermill Luster is a super-smooth, professional-feeling paper with a good weight that provides an excellent printing surface for producing crisp text and images.

    24 lb. bond is an impressive-feeling, heavyweight stationery paper that handles extremely well in laser and inkjet printers.

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  5. *Second Sheets (Unprinted)

  6. *Shrink Wrapping

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    What are the benefits of shrink-wrapping?

    Shrink-wrapping protects against humidity, dust, and dirt; prevents damage from bending, tearing, or folding; and keeps printed items well-organized, under control, and easy to maintain. Printed materials are far easier to transport and store when they're shrink-wrapped together, rather than stacked loosely in a pile.

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