Carbonless Forms

Carbonless Forms
Carbonless Forms

PLAZA specializes in printing carbonless forms in two to five parts. From invoices to order forms, packing slips to receipts, inventory checklists to service contracts, a well-designed carbonless form will keep you organized. Although carbonless forms are most often printed in black ink, we suggest you consider adding additional colors... the difference can be dramatic. We can also print the second side should you need to include "terms and conditions".

Numbering and perforating are commonly used in conjunction with the custom design of your carbonless forms. Also don't forget PLAZA can help with the typesetting design and creation of the form itself. Why not spice up your office forms a little bit !!

Carbonless Forms

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Carbonless Forms   (286151)
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Form ID: 286151

  1. Enter Quantity
  2. *Size

  3. *Color Options

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    Which color option should I choose?

    Most carbonless forms are printed single-sided. After all, carbonless paper only transfers information front-to-back (not-back-to-front). However, some forms contain static information, such as terms and conditions, on the back side of the form for the convenience of the user.

    Two-color printing, as its name implies, uses two ink colors. One is typically black, but it doesn't have to be. One-color printing uses just a single color of ink. Again, black is most common, but you can choose a different color if you prefer.

    Full-color printing provides the maximum impact and visual appeal. However, many forms don't require full-color work, and a well-conceived two-color or even one-color design can prove an acceptable alternative.

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    Front: Full-Color
    Back: Unprinted
  4. *Paper Choices

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    When it comes to paper weight, 20 lb. is pretty standard for most office forms. Carbonless paper comes configured for two, three, four, or five-part forms. Select the number of parts you need.

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  5. *Hole Drilling

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    What is hole drilling?

    Drilling is the printing term for adding holes to the edge of a printed item for binding. It's called drilling (or sometimes punching) because an actual drill (designed specifically for paper) is used to bore through an entire stack of printed materials in one fell swoop. This unique equipment can be set to drill holes that match any standard binding configuration.

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  6. *Numbering

  7. Comments

  8. File(s)