Plastic Coil Binding



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Plastic Coil Binding Is Durable And Looks Professional


There are excellent reasons to choose plastic coil binding and the coordinating manual or electric binding machines and inserters for your document presentations. Nothing looks more professional than a well designed booklet, proposal, packet, or report that is bound by a lightweight, color-coordinated, spiral coil. The fact that you took the time and effort to put your ideas in such a formal but user friendly package is sure to impress those who meet around the table with you. When making a great impression is so important to the acceptance and implementation of your proposals, even the outward appearance of your reading materials counts significantly.

 If you are using these brochures to pass out to advertise your business, the old saying that “you never get a second chance to make a first impression” certainly applies to the quality and professionalism of this type of hand-out. The plastic coil binding will hold your project together attractively, but it will also ensure that reading what is inside will also be easy. This binding allows the pages to lie flat on the table when being read or underlined. You can even fold the papers back 360 degrees for ease in handling.

While plastic coil binding goes by many other names, it is the essential spiral plastic that securely keeps each page in you report in its proper place. It has found a niche not only in the school classroom, but also in offices, businesses, and homes across the country. Schools especially love the durability that comes with using this method to create hand-outs for their students, knowing the wear and tear in this environment is much more than in other places. The durability of spiral coils is one of their best assets.

In addition to all the custom colors, plastic spiral coil binding comes in a variety of pitches, lengths, and diameters for you smallest to largest projects. While a 6mm coil can handle 1-20 sheets of paper very nicely, a 50 mm coil is good for more than 300 sheets at a time. The standard length is 12 inches, but it is possible to order coils that are 36 inches long for those really tall booklets or reports. It is even possible to order these coils with your company’s logo or name or with a book title on the spine. For very little money or time, you can create a huge impact on those to whom you give a professional-looking, coil bound hand-out.


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The Ten Most Common Binding Styles

By Jeff McRitchie
Smart businesses are always looking for ways to improve their image. One simple, relatively inexpensive, but often overlooked way to do just that is to put some serious thought into the appearance of your presentations, reports, and proposals. Here we list the top ten most-used binding methods, and their relative merits and disadvantages.
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Book Binding

By Elizabeth Morgan
Binding is the method wherein printed sheets are put together to form books, magazines, catalogs, folders, directories, or product packaging. Binding can be a very valuable resource while creating a presentation or generally organizing some important documents. This is a good way to ensure that the documents are not assembled in a haphazard manner and can be located easily as and when required.
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