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CETTEC Insights
Practical print insights for legal teams, businesses, designers, and product brands — covering court-ready document production, marketing materials, labels, file setup, and smarter print planning.


Print With Purpose: Practical Ways to Reduce Waste in Printing
Sustainable printing is not just about recycled paper. It starts with smarter decisions on quantities, paper choice, file setup, sizing, and finishing to reduce waste without sacrificing results.
Apr 175 min read


Friday Tip for Designers: Paper Is the 5th Colour in a CMYK World
The same CMYK build can look very different once the stock changes. Here is why paper acts like the 5th colour in print, and what designers should lock down before production.
Apr 104 min read


Why Photos Print Too Dark: How to Check Resolution and Colour Space Before You Print
Photos often print darker than they look on screen. This guide shows how to check image resolution, colour space, shadow detail, and paper choice before sending files to print.
Apr 35 min read


Paper Weight for Printing: Why Heavier Stock Isn’t Always Better
Heavier paper is not automatically better. This post explains how paper weight, stiffness, finish, folding, and use case should drive stock selection in commercial printing.
Mar 275 min read


What Happens in the Print Production Process After Proof Approval
A clear look at what happens after proof approval and how the print production process protects quality through every stage.
Mar 204 min read


Friday Tip: Think Like a Designer — But Account for Print Reality
Print isn’t pixel-perfect. A small image shift within normal tolerances can happen. Design with bleed and safe zones so your piece still looks centred and intentional.
Feb 271 min read


Friday Tip: A printed press proof is the cheapest mistake you’ll ever avoid.
Learn when a printed press proof is essential for long runs and when it’s optional for short runs. Avoid costly reprints and protect your brand.
Feb 201 min read


Friday Tip – Sustainability Edition
Learn how thoughtful print design reduces waste. From reprint prevention and efficient sizing to recycling, coated paper, and smart lamination choices.
Feb 133 min read


Don’t Forget Your Fonts: How to Embed or Outline Fonts for Print
Fonts causing issues on press? Learn when to embed, when to outline, and how to prep clean, print-ready PDFs that match what you see on screen.
Jan 305 min read


When Instructions Become Branding: Instruction Booklet Design That Shapes Experience
How Saddle-Stitched Booklets Shape Perception Before a Product Is Used Here’s something you start to notice when you pay attention to printed materials: Instructions are rarely just instructions. They’re often the first physical thing a customer touches after opening a box. And in that first moment, people form an impression—about the product, the brand, and how much care went into what they’re about to build. You can see it happen. Loose sheets. Tight layouts. Everything cra
Jan 283 min read


Friday Print Tip: Planning a Saddle-Stitched Booklet That Behaves on Press
Saddle-stitched booklets (folded and stapled along the spine) are a great way to package information: manuals, programs, catalogues, training materials, and small magazines. They’re also one of the easiest formats to misjudge if you’re not thinking like a press. Here’s a practical guide to getting them right the first time. 1. Page count: always in multiples of 4 Saddle-stitched booklets are made from folded sheets. Each folded sheet gives you 4 pages, so your total page coun
Jan 234 min read


Friday Print Tips: What Is PDF/X and Why Printers Keep Asking for It
If you send artwork to print, you’ve probably seen a request like: “Please supply a PDF/X-1a” or“Export as PDF/X-4 with bleed and crop marks.” It sounds technical, but PDF/X is simply a set of rules that make PDFs safer for print. Once you understand the basics, it’s one of the easiest ways to cut down on file problems, surprises on press, and back-and-forth with your printer. What Is PDF/X? PDF/X is a family of PDF standards designed specifically for graphic arts and printin
Jan 164 min read
Friday Print Tips: Getting Black Right in CMYK – Why Your “Black” Prints Grey
You design a piece with a big, dramatic black background.On screen it looks deep and inky.In print it comes back… charcoal. In most cases, nothing “went wrong” on press. That’s just what happens when you treat black on screen (RGB) and black on paper (CMYK) as if they’re the same thing. If you remember one rule from this post, make it this: Use K-only black for small text, a controlled rich black for big areas – and never use registration black in your design. Why “100% K” of
Jan 94 min read
Friday Tip: Retire Old Artwork Before It Bites You: A Practical Print Version-Control Guide
You open a fresh box of brochures, flip one over, and see it: the old web address, the previous logo, last year’s promo line. The printer did exactly what it was told. The problem wasn’t the press. It was the file. Most expensive reprints come down to one simple issue: someone grabbed the wrong version. If you use print regularly, cleaning up your artwork is one of the easiest wins you can give yourself this year. Here’s a practical, no-drama way to get your files under contr
Jan 24 min read
Friday Print Tip: 5 Questions to Ask Before You Hit “Go”
A lot of print headaches can be avoided simply by asking the right questions up front. Before you sign off on your next job, ask your printer: Is my file truly print-ready? Are size, bleed and margins set correctly? Any low-resolution images or font issues you can see? Is this the right paper for how we’ll use it? Will this stock fold well, mail well, or hold up in a binder? Is there a better option for the look/feel we’re after? How will colour be handled? Is this printing C
Dec 19, 20251 min read


From Canva to Press: Simple Steps for Print-Ready Files
Canva is great for quick design work, but it wasn’t really built with commercial presses in mind.If you’re sending Canva designs to a print shop, here’s how to keep things running smoothly. 1. Start with the right size and bleed Set your Canva document to the final print size (8.5" × 11", postcard, etc.) Turn on Show print bleed and Show margins Extend backgrounds and images right through the bleed area so there are no white edges after trimming 2. Make sure your images have
Dec 12, 20252 min read


Friday Print Tip: Why “80 lb” Paper Doesn’t Always Feel the Same
Ever ordered “80 lb” paper and been surprised that it felt way thinner or thicker than you expected? You’re not alone – North American paper weights can be confusing. . Here’s the short version: The “lb” is a basis weight – the weight of 500 sheets of a specific parent sheet size Different paper types use different parent sizes That means 80 lb text and 80 lb cover are not the same thing So “pounds” only make sense if you also know the paper type. That’s where GSM (g/m²) come
Dec 5, 20251 min read


Friday Print Tip – “Please use 300 ppi images” isn’t the whole story
If you design for print, you’ve probably seen this requirement in specs:“Please use 300 ppi images.” On its own, that line is incomplete. What actually matters is: the size of the image in your layout, and the number of pixels the image has. You can have three images at 300 ppi, 72 ppi and even 10 ppi that look identical in a print-ready PDF, as long as they all have the same pixel dimensions. The PPI field in the file is not the hero here – pixel count at the final print siz
Nov 28, 20251 min read


Friday Tip: QR codes that actually scan (print edition)
Minimum size: 0.8" (20 mm) square for hand-held pieces; 1.2"+ (30 mm+) for posters viewed from a few feet Quiet zone: leave at least 4 modules of clear space on all sides (no logos or patterns bleeding in) Contrast: dark code on light background; avoid low-contrast brand colours and busy images behind the code File prep: supply vector (PDF/SVG/AI) or a 1000×1000 px PNG at 300 dpi; no JPEG compression Error correction: use level Q or H if you’re overprinting, laminating, or pl
Nov 14, 20251 min read
Friday Tip: Make your tri-fold actually tri-fold
Designing an 8.5″×11″ (216×279 mm) tri-fold? Use these panel widths so the fold-in panel tucks perfectly: Outside (back—fold—front):3.6354″ • 3.6667″ • 3.6979″92.34 mm • 93.13 mm • 93.93 mm Inside (left—middle—right):3.6979″ • 3.6667″ • 3.6354″93.93 mm • 93.13 mm • 92.34 mm Specs that save headaches Bleed: 0.125″ (3.17 mm) all around. Safe area: keep text/logos ≥0.125″ (≈3 mm) from folds/trim. Crossover images: don’t span folds; if you must, give 1/16″ (1.59 mm) cushion. Orie
Nov 7, 20251 min read
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