Tuesday, June 5, 2018

Matte Lamination vs Gloss Lamination


What is Lamination?
Lamination is the technique of manufacturing a material in multiple layers, so that the composite material achieves improved strength, stability, sound insulation, appearance or other properties from the use of differing materials. A laminate is a permanently assembled object by heat, pressure, welding, or adhesives.

Laminating paper products, such as photographs, can prevent them from becoming creased, faded, water damaged, wrinkled, stained, smudged, abraded, or marked by grease or fingerprints. Photo identification cards and credit cards are almost always laminated with plastic film. Boxes and other containers are also laminated using a UV coating.

In essence, lamination makes the product ‘ready’ to be put into the hands of consumers. You can consider two types of lamination: Matte and Gloss.

Whether it applies to the surface of a paper bag, book cover, label, or packaging box, lamination enhances the visual quotient and tactile feel of the product. It also serves as a protective layer to resist scratches and unexpected damages.

Gloss vs Matte

What is Matte Lamination?
An easy way to ascertain if the bag or packaging box is matte laminated is by observing if light reflects off the surface. If it doesn’t, you’re looking at Matte lamination!

Next, assess the aesthetic properties of the surface. Does it look sober (no sheen) yet elegant and luxurious? Are the colors a bit muted and is the depth of color somewhat lacking?

These characteristics define matte laminate. While the overall effect of matte laminated surfaces is somewhat understated, it is palpably high-end and sophisticated.

What is Gloss lamination?
In contrast to matte lamination, gloss has a lustrous quality as light bounces off the surface. The effect is that of vibrancy, better image contrast and a richer depth of color.

Gloss laminated bags and magazines draw attention to themselves; in this respect, they can be viewed as more showy to their subdued matte counterparts.

For this reason, they may lend themselves well to brochures, cover photos, perfume boxes and book spines. Gloss lamination can refine a product in a different way from matte lamination.




Which of the two should you choose?
The answer to ‘which one is better’ must be prefaced by ‘what will the lamination be used for?’ to make an informed choice. As discussed above, each has its pros and cons; depending on the application, the drawbacks may not matter or be moot.

In fact, you can consider a ‘best of both worlds’ scenario. For instance, applying a matte laminate over a glossy label can make barcode scanning easier and allow users to handwrite over it when such a need arises.

Some may view matte lamination as being unexciting. Adding glossy laminate over a matte label can provide a lustrous patina and a smoother look.

A Comparison of Benefits



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