Pride in Print Award Night Wrap up
Pride in Print Award Night Wrap
up
Pride In Print
2010 Supreme Award Winner and Packaging Category
Winner
Baby Food
Can Wins Supreme Print Award for
Waikato
Winning the most
prestigious award in the New Zealand print industry will be
the catalyst to put Fonterra Canpac of
Hamilton back on track after a catastrophic fire earlier
this year.
Canpac earned the Supreme Award in the 2010
New Zealand Pride In Print Awards tonight (subs: Friday June
18) for a metal baby food can that has been a success in
extremely-demanding overseas markets. Its Nutricia Karicare
Gold Plus 1 can wowed judges with its technical excellence
allied to the fact that it had gained acceptance with
international clients whose standards are exacting.
But
while the can earned international recognition from
customers in tough global markets, print plant manager Greg
Wardrop said that its other major success would be to
restore morale at the Hamilton plant.
“The fire closed
down our production and was a very hard blow to take. This
win will help us rebuilt that department and come back
stronger. We have had a tough year but this will make us
more determined to come back,” he said.
In a testament
to the collaborative spirit within the New Zealand print
industry, Mr Wardrop paid tribute to competitor NCI
Packaging who had come to the aid of Canpac while its
production was disrupted.
Pride In Print chairman and
senior judge Scott Porter said that for any packaging to
succeed in the global arena, it had to be
outstanding.
“There is a huge emotional attachment in
the relationship between mother and baby and that is
reflected in the relationship between the product and its
packaging. This is a super-tough market for a packaging
printer to make an impression.”
As well as winning the
Supreme Award, the Nutricia Karicare can also won the
Packaging Category, where it came up against entrants in
flexible packaging, carton board and corrugated board, metal
and other types of packaging.
Promotional Print Category
Superb Photo Essay Book Takes Promotional Print Prize
KENETIC 121 SNARES PRINT AWARD FOR WELLINGTON
Rekindling
magic moments of a trip through Europe and taking readers
back to their own world travels, has won a Wellington firm
the Promotional Print Category of the Pride In Print Awards
held in Auckland’s Sky City tonight (subs: Friday June
18).
Entered by Kinetic 121 and printed
by Momento Photobooks of Wellington, the success of the
single-edition photo essay
“Netherlands-Paris-Netherlands” reflects the growing
importance of the photo book market to wedding albums,
family histories and personal mementoes.
Kinetic 121
production manager Lisa Thompson said that producing the
book was a major test of the printer-customer
relationship.
“With this kind of work you know there
is only one copy. You just have to get it right. You are
capturing personal memories and you simply must do it
perfectly.”
Ms Thompson said that Momento was creating
an important print niche with such books – “As digital
print becomes more accessible in the market, companies such
as Momento are showing there is huge potential for
personalised print. Quantities of between one and 1000 are
within everyone’s
reach.”
Netherlands-Paris-Netherlands was up against
entries covering customised campaigns, catalogues and
leaflets, presentational folders, promotional work and
calendars in the Promotional Print
Category.
Publications Category and Web Process
Immaculate Mindfood Is Top Publication
Glossy magazine Mindfood has shown
what it takes to jump off the news stand and into the hands
of the magazine reader, by taking out the Publications
Category of the Pride In Print Awards held tonight (subs:
Friday June 18) at Auckland’s Sky City
Entered by
APN Print Manukau, Mindfood July/August
2009 edition impressed judges with its immaculate quality of
production and also won the Web Process Award.
Heatset
web print judges said Mindfood stood out because of its high
degree of difficulty.
APN Print Manukau operations
manager Craig Harris said this was a prestigious
title.
“We actually got the client set up at their end
to the ISO standard, we did the front-end work and then they
followed it through and we get a good result. We’re a
leading force in the ISO standard – finger-printing our
presses and working with outside companies to make sure
we’re always printing the best that we can. With the
changes that happen, you’ve got to keep adapting them. It
is all something that benchmarks the
industry.”
Mindfood was competing against other
magazines, newspapers and books in the Publications
Category.
Environmental Award
Pallet Label Goes Outside the Square to Win Environment Award
An innovative
pallet label produced by a Hawkes Bay company that won over
Japanese wood product importers has been further recognised
with the Environmental Prize at the Pride In Print Awards
held in Auckland’s Sky City tonight (subs: Friday June
18).
The Pulp Pallet Labels for Pan Pac, entered by
GEON Napier, solved a labelling problem
that had concerned exporters of pulp to Asia. It produced a
fully-recyclable label that can be reduced to pulp along
with the pallets of wood it is attached to, fully meeting
the requirements of the Japanese importers.
“This is
an example of looking at a problem in a different way and
coming up with a new solution,” said senior design judge
Kerenza Smith.
“The company worked with the end client
through every step of research, including pulping tests, to
discover the best way forward. It was a partnership approach
that reviewed the technological options and environmental
research to come up with a replacement for a
non-environmental product.
“It is little things like
this that make a difference in our industry. To get this
solution accepted in a very demanding overseas market is a
very impressive design feat.”
The Environmental Award
was part of the Industry Development Category of the Pride
In Print Awards.
Specialty Products Category
Tee Shirt With a Kick Takes Judges’ Eye
A New Zealand screen printing
company has shown it can do as well as the international
opposition, producing a tee-shirt that amazed judges in
taking out the Specialty Products Category of the Pride In
Print Awards.
The Kicking Imprint tee-shirt features a
three-dimensional boot, complete with laces. It was entered
by Screen Printing Solutions of
Hamilton.
Judges speculated on the labour hours required
to create such a striking piece of clothing.
Senior
screen printing judge Chris Knuckey said that the tee-shirt
was a well-executed example of a technique using a special
ink which puffs up to create a three-dimensional
effect.
“They added embellishments such as eyelets and
laces on the boot. The text is sharp and there are no flaws.
Doing all of this in any kind of big production run would be
demanding in the extreme.
“This company is going from
strength to strength each year,” he said.
The Kicking
Imprint tee-shirt was entered in the textiles section of the
Specialty Products Category, which also included sections
for limited edition and fine art prints, specialty finishing
products, personal stationery and printed industrial
products.
Innovation
Award
Sealing Tape Opens New Opportunities for Print
A Christchurch company
that worked with its customer to develop a sealing tape that
combines high-visibility branding with a tamper-proof
security solution has carried off the Pride In Print Awards
Innovation Award.
GEON Christchurch got
plaudits from senior design judge Kerenza Smith who said the
seal was an example of a company taking existing
technologies and combining them to produce a new opportunity
for the print industry.
“The ease-of-use of reel-fed
adhesive and high-resolution colour printing have been
brought together in this innovation. The company has worked
with the client to produce a sealing tape that is
highly-visible, and can carry the customer’s logo or
whatever additional high-quality graphics they need to have
printed.
“The design makes it tamper-resistant and
will show if there has been a breach of security. And
variations of the seal have been produced to go with
products that are refrigerated or frozen for
example.
“Overall, this is a clever innovation that is
both cost-effective and opens a new area of print
production,” she said.
The Innovation Award was part
of the Industry Development Category of the Pride In Print
Awards.
Display Print Category and Digital Process
Bravery in Swatch Design Gets Display Reward
A swatch display for Colorsteel
panels has won the Display Print Category and Digital
Process prize in the Pride In Print Awards for Auckland
company Digital River Limited.
The
display featured swatches of Colorsteel representing the
different colours available of the product, which had to be
perfectly aligned and mounted on a printed display
board.
Digital River managing director Rex Lee paid
tribute to his staff for the final product.
“Once you
got started, you had to keep going and carry it off
perfectly. The operators did so and produced a fantastic
finish. The customer was delighted with the finished
product,” he said.
Senior judge Ron Cuddy said the job
was impressive. “The finishing on this piece is
outstanding. It was a brave task for the company to
undertake,” he said.
The Display Print Category
featured banners, posters, showcards, billboards and applied
graphics.
Business Print Category and Screen Process
Brilliant Business Card Pushes Boundaries of Print
Producing a beautiful
business card for a plastic surgeon, that combined clever
printing and embellishments, has won the Business Print
Category and Screen Process prize in the Pride In Print
Awards.
The Julian Lofts Business Cards that won the
award for Auckland company Permark
Industries looks simple but in fact is highly
complex.
Screen printing judge Chris Knuckey said both
the front and back of the plastic card were printed, and
with see-through text, it was essential that the
right-reading and reverse-reading images matched up
perfectly.
“This is a first-class job. It also
involved metallic embellishments and the whole thing
required a great deal of skill to bring it together. These
guys I notice are getting better in their work very year.
They are pushing outside the boundaries with the quality of
their work,” he said.
Mr Knuckey described the card as
“one of the best pieces of work I have seen in a long
time”.
The Business Print Category featured
stationery, annual reports and company prospectuses,
security printing such as stamps, cheques and plastic cards,
and business forms.
Labels
Category
Minimalist Label Makes Big Impact On Shelves
A minimalist wine label design
that has “consumer appeal on the supermarket shelf” has
taken out the Labels Category in the Pride In Print Awards
for Auckland company Panprint.
The Tiki
Sauvignon Blanc 2009 label impressed judges with its quality
of finishing and was said by senior labels judge Mike Davis
to have achieved true excellence in its
production.
“Anything that goes to market with a label
is relying on that label to make an impact on the shelves.
Designers strive to make something look different and stand
out.
“This label may be minimalist to the first look,
but it the cleverness is in the finishing. In terms of a
print job the registration and embossing is as perfect as
you can get,” said Mr Davis.
Panprint general manager
John Lowther said that the minimalist design reflected where
the New Zealand wine industry was at.
“The New World
wines are different from the Old World. The French and
Italian labels are more elaborate. But this label had to be
simple and capture the essence of New Zealand, hence the
Tiki concept. The customer feedback we got was that it was
exactly what they wanted. It will be a thrill to ring them
and tell them they have won and award,” he said.
The
Labels Category included sheetfed, reelfed and multi-process
labels as well as wine labels.
Sheetfed Process
Winner
Ultimate
Guide Wins Ultimate Prize for GEON
Highbrook
A book of
“eye-catching colour and sharpness” that persuades the
magazine buyer to pick it up has landed the Pride In Print
sheetfed process award for Auckland company GEON
Highbrook.
The Ultimate Guide had judges hugely
impressed even before they saw it on the judging
table.
“I picked up a copy in Taupo and thought it was
great,” said one senior judge. “The Ultimate Guide
embodies quality and productivity in the competitive
publications environment, particularly tourism.
“The
‘pick up and flick through’ aspect is one of
eye-catching colour and sharpness, complemented by good
stock choice and easy-to-read layout. It has been run on a
perfecting press, probably slotted in as a normal production
run and quoted with tight margins, and bound with a soft
cover.
“In other words, it’s a great-looking, really
colourful job.”
Finishing Process Winner
Octane Gets It Spot On for Finishing Award
A “peep show” booklet that brought
magic to the combination of design, illustration and print
has won the Pride In Print Finishing Process Award for
Octane Digital of Auckland.
The
intricately die cut booklet “Our Little Secret” that was
printed by Auckland firm Centurion Print wowed judges with
the delicacy with which it was prepared and
assembled.
Senior finishing judge Kenny McQueenie said
the die cutting had to be “spot on perfect” otherwise
the job would have been ruined.
“It was brilliant.
There must have been a ton of work gone into perfecting it.
This was obviously a specialist job with little or no
tolerances for error. If I was the buyer I would be
absolutely delighted and proud of the end result, which
would compete with any print finishing worldwide,” he
said.
Judging convenor Fraser Gardyne said this was a
totally Kiwi project that was also entered in the BeST
Design Awards last year where it won a Gold
Medal.
“Our Little Secret is one of those surprising
packages where the designers and printers have really
excelled to delight the viewer.
“When you opened this
little book that was sealed with a bow, each spread revealed
a beautifully-illustrated scene in three dimensions. These
were created by paper engineering and skilful binding that
allowed the book to open displaying a scene in four layers.
The illustrations were die cut in such a way that when
opened it gave the impression of depth to the landscapes.
“This is a great example of what is called a tunnel
or peepshow book which date from the mid-eighteenth century
being inspired by theatrical stage sets.
“The
thoroughness and quality of Our Little Secret was exciting
to the judges. A magnificent project which reinforces the
magic of what great design, illustration and print can
achieve,” said Mr Gardyne.
Flexible Process Winner
Learning From Mistakes Nets Major Prize for Sealed Air
Hamilton company
Sealed Air New Zealand has shown it can pluck
success from adversity in taking out the award for Best
Flexible Process entry at the Pride In Print
Awards.
Sealed Air’s winning Littleneck Clams
packaging work had actually been entered last year, when
tiny registration flaws that were only noticeable under
expert inspection meant it fell at the final hurdle.
But
this year, with the printers having taken the time to get
the printing absolutely perfect, the judges could find no
fault and duly gave it the top prize in its
process.
Judges commented that it was a very good
example of what can be achieved using flexographic printing
when the subject matter is something that can make or break
the final appearance of the finished pack.
“Seafood is
very subjective when it comes to what looks fresh and what
doesn't. Unfortunately last year’s entry showed some minor
registration problems that although were not discernible to
the naked eye, were there for the judges to see under the
very high level of scrutiny that all submitted work is
subject to.
“The judges’ comments and feedback were
relayed to the printers and they took them to heart. This
year the entry was of the highest
quality.”
Special Commendation for Promoting the Print Industry
Creative Juices Flow Over “Pimp My Paper”
A Spicers Paper promotional
competition that created a “buzz” among the graphic
design community, has inspired New Zealand’s creative
talent while also proving an invaluable marketing tool for
printing stock, process and technique.
Earning both a
Gold Medal and Special Industry Commendation in the Industry
Development category at this year’s Pride In Print Awards
for Switch Design, the campaign invited designers to turn a
blank die cut “CardBot” into something
memorable.
Marketed to a database of about 600, the
promotion attracted about 150 entries which were uploaded
for an online voting competition. The four winning designs
-- “SauceBot”, “KingBot”, “GorillaBot” and
“CowBot” -- were then physically produced as fold-ups in
a process which united design, print, embellishing and
packaging.
Spicers Paper marketing manager Carolyn
Lockstone said the aim was to re-engage the design community
with “ink-on-paper” and bring the focus back onto some
of the older crafts such as foiling and
embossing.
“They had to download a CardBot image and
‘pimp’ it -- the world was their oyster in regards to an
embellishing and printing process,” said Ms
Lockstone.
“We took the four winning entries and
worked with them to create the actual printed piece. So they
might have said ‘we want to do this embellishment with
it’ and we said ‘okay if we look at this paper we are
putting it on, what if we do this, this and this’. So
between us, the printer, the CardBot designer and our
agency, we printed the four Bots.
“It was a really
great promotion that does show the old crafts of
printing.”
Switch creative director Chris Jones
believes the campaign has succeeded in stimulating the
imaginations of budding designers.
Pride In Print
chairperson Scott Porter said only occasionally does a
promotional campaign come along that is “just too much fun
to ignore”.
“Pimp My Paper was definitely one of
these,” he said. “Although fairly simple in concept, the
buzz it created and the creative juices that it got working
within the industry were refreshing to
see.”
End