Custom Roll Labels & Stickers
Labels are how your product communicates on the shelf — and how your packaging holds together in the customer's hands. We print custom roll labels (the kind that go on bottles, jars, candles, food packaging, and product boxes) along with die-cut stickers, kiss-cut sticker sheets, and clear vinyl labels for product launches and giveaways.
Roll labels print on white BOPP, white paper, clear BOPP, and silver foil — all with strong adhesives that hold up in fridges, freezers, and through standard handling. Die-cut stickers can be ordered in any custom shape; the dieline preview is built into the product page. Most orders ship in 2–5 business days; we handle continental U.S. shipping via UPS Ground.
Frequently asked
What's the difference between BOPP and paper labels?
BOPP is a synthetic film — waterproof, oil-resistant, and tear-resistant. Paper labels are warmer, cheaper, and feel more "craft" but won't survive moisture. For consumable goods (drinks, soaps, candles), BOPP is almost always the right call.
Can I get clear labels?
Yes — clear BOPP labels are stocked. Use white-ink underprinting on any element you want to read clearly against a dark background.
How are roll labels wound?
You pick the unwind direction (1, 2, 3, or 4) on the product page based on your label-applicator machine. If you're hand-applying, any direction works.
Is there a minimum order?
Roll labels start at 250 units; die-cut stickers start at 50. Larger quantities get steep volume discounts on the same product page.
From the blog
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Branded notepads vs. generic: the client gift that actually gets used
A working guide to branded notepads as client gifts — why they beat generic pads, the stock and size decisions, the per-pad math, and when to skip them.
Letterhead and envelopes: why the matched set still matters
A working guide to printing letterhead and envelopes as a matched set — stock choices, when it's worth it, the per-piece math, and how to keep both pieces looking like they belong together.
Event tickets: numbering, perforation, and keeping the gate honest
A working guide to printed event tickets — when sequential numbering matters, how perforated stubs control the door, and which security features actually earn their cost.