A heated copper die presses metallic or pigment foil into the paper surface. The result is opaque, reflective, and permanent — a finish that ink alone cannot replicate.
Foil stamping uses a heated copper or magnesium die to press a thin layer of metallic or pigment foil onto paper. The heat activates an adhesive on the back of the foil, bonding it permanently to the surface.
Unlike letterpress ink, which is transparent, foil is completely opaque. That means light colors like white and gold print cleanly on dark paper — something ink cannot do. It is one of the most requested techniques we offer.
How the process works
Every foil stamping job starts with a custom die. We produce a copper or magnesium die from your artwork — the die is a mirror image of your design, machined to precise depth.
The die is mounted on the press and heated. A roll of foil is positioned between the die and your paper. When the press closes, the heat and pressure transfer the foil from its carrier to the paper surface in the exact shape of the die.
Each foil color requires its own die and a separate press run. A two-color foil job — gold text with a silver border, for example — means two dies and two passes through the press. This is also why foil can be combined with letterpress: one pass for the foil, another for the ink.
What is the difference between foil stamping and foil printing?
They are the same process. "Foil stamping," "foil printing," and "hot foil stamping" all refer to using a heated die to transfer foil onto paper.
The term "foil printing" is sometimes confused with digital foil, which uses toner-based adhesive and a foil laminator. Digital foil is faster and cheaper for large areas of coverage, but produces a flatter, less reflective result. Traditional foil stamping — what we do — uses a physical die and delivers a sharper, more dimensional finish.
Comparison of foil stamped finish quality
Gold foil on black cotton paper
Light on dark. Opaque on anything.
The defining advantage of foil over ink is opacity. Letterpress ink is transparent — print white ink on black paper and you get gray. Print white foil on black paper and you get crisp, clean white.
This is why foil stamping is the standard technique for white-on-dark printing, gold text on navy stock, silver monograms on charcoal envelopes, and any design where a light element needs to hold its own against a dark background.
We stock gold, silver, copper, rose gold, bronze, holographic, white, black, and colored foils — and can source custom colors from multiple suppliers.
Smooth and soft papers produce the sharpest foil results. Cotton stocks like Crane's Lettra are excellent — the soft fibers accept the foil cleanly and the matte surface makes the metallic finish pop.
Heavily textured papers can cause the foil to break up in recessed areas, leaving a spotty or incomplete transfer. This is not always a problem — some projects use that texture intentionally — but it is something to plan for.
We test combinations regularly and can recommend the best paper-foil pairing for your project. See our full paper selection for options.
What we foil stamp
Foil stamping works on nearly anything we print. Here are the most common applications.
Wedding Invitations
Gold foil on thick cotton stock is one of the most classic and requested combinations for wedding stationery. We foil stamp invitations, envelopes, RSVP cards, and day-of pieces.
Foil stamped business cards make an immediate impression. Combine with duplexing or edge painting for a card that communicates quality before anyone reads a word.
Yes. Foil and letterpress complement each other well and are frequently combined on the same piece. Each requires its own die or plate and a separate press run. Separate the foil and ink elements onto different layers in your design file so we can produce the correct dies.
What colors are available for foil stamping?
We stock gold, silver, copper, rose gold, bronze, holographic, white, black, and several colored foils. Each comes in matte or gloss finishes. We can also source custom foil colors from multiple suppliers to match nearly any specification.
Foil stamping requires a custom die, which is a one-time cost based on the size and complexity of the design. The per-piece cost depends on the foil color, coverage area, and quantity. Multiple foil colors each require a separate die and press run, adding to both die and production costs.
The die is reusable — if you reorder the same design, you only pay for materials and press time on subsequent runs.
How detailed can foil stamping be?
Foil holds fine detail well, but there are practical limits. Very thin lines (below about 0.5pt) and tiny text (below about 6pt) may not transfer cleanly, especially on textured paper. Large solid areas of foil coverage can also be challenging — the heat distribution needs to be even across the entire area.
We review every file before production and will flag anything that might cause problems.
What is the difference between gold foil and gold ink?
Gold foil is actual metallic foil pressed onto the paper. Gold ink is ink mixed with metallic particles. Foil produces a brighter, more reflective finish and is completely opaque. Metallic ink is subtler, slightly transparent, and less expensive. For a true metallic look — especially on dark paper — foil is the better choice.
Ready to add some foil?
Tell us about your project and we will recommend the right foil, paper, and technique combination.