Most digital-first founders go years without producing any print materials. Then they need a business card, a one-pager for a conference, a piece of mail, packaging. And discover that the brand they built for screens doesn't translate cleanly. Colors look different. Lines that were crisp on screen look soft. The vendor sends back a proof that doesn't match what was approved digitally.
This is a different medium with different rules. Here's the primer most digital-first founders never get, organized by what you need to know in roughly the order you'll need it.
The color problem (and why screens lie)
Digital screens display color using RGB. Red, green, and blue light combined to produce every color you see. Print produces color using CMYK. Cyan, magenta, yellow, and black inks combined to absorb light, leaving the color that reflects back.
These are fundamentally different color models. Some RGB colors can't be reproduced in CMYK at all (especially vivid blues and oranges). Some CMYK colors can't be matched in RGB. The conversion between them isn't deterministic. Different software, printers, and paper produce slightly different results from the same CMYK values.
Practical implications:
- The color you see on screen isn't what will print. Always.
- Your brand color hex values are RGB. They don't directly translate to print.
- For consistent print color, define Pantone (PMS) values for your brand colors. Pantone spot colors are physical ink formulas that print consistently across vendors and runs.
- For digital-press work (modern offset and inkjet), CMYK values your designer specifies will produce reasonably consistent results.
Defining the print-ready brand colors
Three color values you need for each brand color, in priority order for print:
1. Pantone (PMS) spot color. For most print applications, this is the best reference. Vendors can match Pantone colors precisely using physical ink mixing. Example: "Pantone 7626 C" is a specific coral that prints the same way at every Pantone-certified vendor.
2. CMYK values. For digital printing or when Pantone isn't available. Specify as four numbers: C30 M85 Y70 K10, for example. Best for typical print runs that don't justify spot-color setup.
3. RGB / hex values. For digital display (your existing brand color spec).
The brand quick-reference should include all three for any color used in print. Without all three, the print vendor guesses and the result varies.
Resolution and the DPI question
Digital screens display at relatively low resolutions, 72 to 144 dots per inch typically. Print typically wants 300 DPI for crisp output. This means an image that fills a 1000-pixel-wide screen has only enough resolution to print at about 3 inches wide at 300 DPI.
Practical implications:
- Vector files (SVG, AI, PDF) scale infinitely. Use them for print whenever possible.
- Raster files (PNG, JPG) need higher resolution for print than for screen. Plan for 300 DPI at final print size.
- A logo that looks crisp on your website may pixelate when printed at meaningful size. Check the source resolution.
- Screenshots are typically 72 DPI. Printing them at 6+ inches will look soft. Take screenshots at 2x scale or use higher-res sources.
Bleed, trim, and safety zones
Three terms every print project requires understanding:
Bleed. Print files extend beyond the final cut size. Typically 1/8" or 3mm. This bleed accounts for slight variation in cutting. Without bleed, you risk a thin white strip where the design didn't quite reach the edge.
Trim. The line where the paper actually gets cut to final size. Design lives inside the trim line; bleed extends past it.
Safety zone. Critical content (text, logos, important visual elements) should stay 1/8" or 3mm inside the trim line. This prevents critical elements from being cut off by minor trimming variation.
If you've ever received a business card with the logo touching the edge or text that's been cut at the bottom, the issue was missing bleed or safety zone in the source file.
Paper stock and finish choices
Paper isn't a neutral medium. The paper choice affects how the brand feels physically:
Stock weight. Measured in pounds (US) or GSM (international). Heavier feels more premium. 100-130 lb / 270-350 GSM is typical for business cards; lighter for general printing.
Surface finish. Matte (no shine, ink looks slightly absorbed), satin (slight sheen), gloss (high reflection), uncoated (natural paper texture). Each communicates differently.
- Uncoated feels honest, crafted, premium-natural. Used by brands like Aesop, Glossier, Everlane.
- Matte feels modern, sophisticated, considered. Used by most premium SaaS marketing.
- Gloss feels brand-mass-market, photographic, commercial. Used by typical mass-marketing.
Specialty finishes. Spot UV (selective gloss on otherwise matte surface), foil stamping, embossing/debossing, edge painting. Each is expensive but produces tangible distinction.
The paper and finish choices contribute to brand perception more than founders realize. A business card on a heavy uncoated stock feels meaningfully different from the same design on a cheap glossy card. The brand investment is partly about which stock you choose, not just which design you use.
Common print mistakes from digital-first brands
Mistake 1: Designing in RGB and converting to CMYK at the end. The conversion can produce surprises. The vivid blue you designed for becomes flat. Better to design with CMYK previews enabled from the start.
Mistake 2: Forgetting that white isn't ink. On colored paper or colored backgrounds, "white" elements need to be printed as actual white ink (a specific specification) or they'll show the paper color through them.
Mistake 3: Using low-resolution rasters. Your homepage logo at 200 pixels wide can't print at 5 inches. Source the vector or a higher-resolution version.
Mistake 4: Skipping bleed. Even careful printers don't cut perfectly. Without bleed, some percentage of your printed pieces will have visible white edges.
Mistake 5: Not test-printing before bulk. The proof costs $20-50. The reprint of 5,000 wrong pieces costs the run. Always approve a physical proof before bulk runs.
The first-print-project checklist
Before sending any file to a print vendor:
- File is in CMYK or has explicit Pantone color specifications
- Resolution is 300 DPI minimum at final print size (or file is vector)
- Bleed extends 1/8" past trim on all sides
- Critical content stays 1/8" inside trim line
- Fonts are outlined or properly embedded
- Black text uses K100 ink, not RGB black (which can print muddy)
- You've requested a physical proof before bulk production
Working through this checklist once produces files that print correctly. Skipping it produces print runs that don't match what was designed.
The brand identity expansion print requires
Adding print capability to your brand means adding a few specifications to your existing digital brand identity:
- Pantone color values for primary brand colors
- CMYK values as alternate spec
- Print-resolution versions of all logo files
- One paragraph in your brand reference about paper stock preferences
- One paragraph about typography in print (which weights work, which become unreadable at smaller print sizes)
Two hours of work. Done once, applies to every print project the brand will produce. Without this expansion, every print project starts from scratch on color and resolution decisions, and the results vary.
Most digital-first brands never invest in print readiness until they need it under pressure. The smarter move: do the 2 hours of print-readiness work the next time you have brand bandwidth. By the time you need a business card, a piece of packaging, or a printed deliverable, the specifications are in place and the result reflects the brand you've built rather than approximating it.
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