The design and quality of the labels entered into New Zealand’s premiere printing industry event has wowed judges who said this year’s entries set a new benchmark. Labels made up the largest category in Pride In Print 2020, receiving almost double the number that were submitted last year.

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Judging took place before lockdown began in New Zealand and results will be announced later this month. The awards night event was postponed from May 8th because of COVID-19 restrictions. Organisers have now decided against rescheduling the event and will instead announce the winners in an online event on Thursday 25th June.

Labels made up the largest category in Pride In Print 2020, receiving almost double the number that were submitted last year, a rise from 90 entries in 2019 to 162 this year, said a press release from the organisers.

Label judge Tony Wheeler said there’d been a large increase in offset printed entries, and many of them, including those digitally printed, had a greater degree of embellishment than in previous years, making judging much more interesting. These included varnishes, foils, coatings, textures, embossing and debossing and even sculptured foil.

While embellishments added to the design and appeal of labels, they didn’t take away the necessity for the basics – good printing with perfect registration and judges were careful to examine the fundamentals when awarding gold medals, Wheeler said.

"New machinery was certainly helping to raise the bar in label printing, however in an awards programme it became evident that skill and dedication to producing quality work separated out the jobs that won a medal. While new machinery is helping to raise the benchmark, quality is still ruled by the quality of the original design right through to the final execution. In some of the entries the degree of difficulty was very high; the embellishments just added to that.”

prideinprint judging 2019
  Pride in Print judges 2019

 Awards manager Sue Archibald said the label category had always been a growth area for the printing industry and it was pleasing to see that quality had risen across the board.

Archibald said the increased level of participation this year “was a big jump considering the state of the nation” and clearly indicative of the pride printers and related trades were taking in their work.”

https://www.prideinprintawards.co.nz

 

 

 

 

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