Creating Alumni Magazines That Resonate Across Generations

Greek organizations have a rare advantage: your story spans decades, yet your community is renewed every school year. For a fraternity, sorority or alumni association, an alumni magazine can keep key alumni, recent grads and current members moving in the same direction. The challenge is that each group reads differently, interacts differently and shares differently. […]
Print Security: How Our Secure Wisconsin Printing Facility Operates

Sensitive information is printed every day on statements, notices, letters and records. When that data becomes ink on paper, security has to travel with it through pre-press, printing, bindery and mailing. For organizations in finance, medical and education in particular, that chain of custody is critical because the documents often contain personal and regulated information. […]
Digital Printing and Offset Printing: What’s the Difference?

When businesses need to print materials in different quantities or with specific customization, choosing the right printing method can make all the difference. Whether you need high-volume catalogs with precise color matching or personalized books that speak to individual readers, understanding the differences between digital and offset printing will help you select the most effective…
Offset or Digital Printing for Catalogs: Balancing Quality and Efficiency

Catalog printing is a constant balancing act. You want rich color, crisp product detail and a premium feel, but you also need speed, budget control and the flexibility to adjust quantities when demand shifts. The good news is you do not have to pick a “best†method in the abstract. You just need the right […]
Choosing the Right Binding Method for your Catalog

Binding is one of the most visible quality signals in a luxury catalog. It affects how the piece opens, how long it lasts, how it feels in the hand and how confidently it represents your brand. The “right†method is rarely about tradition or habit. It is about matching the catalog’s purpose, page count, paper […]
How Catalog Paper Choice Affects Color Appearance

In a luxury catalog, color is part of the product. It communicates quality, sets mood and makes materials look realistic. Yet the same content can look noticeably different across paper stocks. Paper is not a passive background; its shade, surface and absorbency change how ink sits on the sheet and how light reflects back to […]
Hyper-Personalization in Print: What’s Possible Today

Personalized printing once meant little more than swapping in a name or address. Today, marketers and publishers can tailor message, imagery and even how a piece is assembled so it feels intentionally designed for one recipient, not a broad list. That is the current bar for hyper-personalization in print: 1:1 relevance delivered at scale, powered […]
Why Print Still Improves Learning Outcomes in K–12 and Higher Education

In 2026, education is more digital than ever. Many tests are taken on computers, tablets are common and AI tools are now part of the classroom conversation. Yet printed materials still deliver measurable learning advantages, especially when the goal is deep comprehension, durable recall and sustained attention. For educational publishers, the takeaway is not “print […]
The Value of Customization in Educational Printing

Education is personal. A third grader learning to read needs a different experience than a senior prepping for finals. A district adopting new standards needs updated pages fast, while a university needs recruitment materials that speak to each prospective student. That push toward relevance is baked into the idea of personalized learning: tailoring instruction to […]
The Lasting Power of Craftsmanship: Celebrating 89 Years of ¶¶Òñ¶ÌÊÓÆµ

This year, ¶¶Òñ¶ÌÊÓÆµ turns 89. That number carries weight, not just because of its size, but because of everything behind it – nearly nine decades of craftsmanship, commitment and partnerships built on trust. From the start, ¶¶Òñ¶ÌÊÓÆµ has been shaped by people who cared deeply about what they were making and who they were making […]
