Awards xx

FMCG Packaging Printer of the Year 2015: The Sherwood Group

They are short in shelf-life and lower in unit cost, but FMCG goods make complex demands on the likes of Sherwood Group. Print for such goods calls for fast turnarounds and product consistency across...

Social Stationery Printer of the Year 2015: Woodmansterne Publications

“Even we were surprised we could do it that well,” reads the category entry from Woodmansterne Publications, which may or may not suggest surprise from a company that seemingly came from nowhere to...

Report & Accounts Printer of the Year 2015: Park Communications

Annual reports, like the PrintWeek Awards, come around once a year. And, like last year, Park Communications walked away the winner of this category. Was it the complexity of incorporating six...

Catalogue Printer of the Year 2015: Wyndeham Roche

Consistency sums up Wyndeham Roche, whether it’s the consistency of colour and folding accuracy paramount for the TTS Compendium, or the fine tuning and consistent running of presses to secure...

Bespoke Digital Printer of the Year 2015: Screaming Colour

Screaming Colour is making a habit of this. Highly commended last year, winner in 2013, the creative production house in London romped home again in 2015. Judges for the category, aimed at short-run,...

Luxury Packaging Printer of the Year 2015: Boss Print

“Great detail, great consistency, great impact - a great entry all round,” was the judges verdict. The box-and-scroll achievement presentation box for Royal Holloway University included a...

Watermill Press shortlisted for Living Wage Champion awards

Bradford-based labelling manufacturer Watermill Press has been shortlisted by the Living Wage Foundation for the 2015 Living Wage Champion Awards.

Ted Baker team wins top award at Antalis Review

The team which took “the biggest creative risk of all the entries” walked away with the top prize at this year’s Antalis ‘The Review’ awards.

Print has learned the marketing lesson

At the tail end of last month PrintWeek Towers was a picture of (organised) cardboard chaos, with the atrium of St Jude’s crammed full of boxes of all descriptions in anticipation of the four judging...