It's green but it isn't perfect
[gallery link="file" orderby="rand"]I’ve been printing stickers on an uncoated sticker stock composed of bamboo, bagasse and cotton-linters. A tree-free sticker stock. It’s really cool stuff and I’ve printed it for a bunch of companies who put it on their soaps, candles, use it for shipping/mailing labels, branding, you get the idea. I love this stuff - it’s uncoated, so it absorbs ink in a natural, somewhat uncontrollable manner and the registration when using two or more colors isn’t perfect. It has a raw and natural look to it.This stock is manufactured or converted by Fasson which is a subsidiary or some derivative of Avery-Dennison.I call up Fasson/Avery-Dennison and ask them to tell me where and how the tree-free stock is manufactured. A wonderfully pleasant person tells me that unfortunately the country where the tree-free stock is manufactured is proprietary information and cannot be disclosed. HUH??? ”Can you, uh… narrow it down to a hemisphere, would that be possible to tell me which hemisphere the stock comes from?” I ask. ”No. That is not possible. But I can tell you the stock is sustainablymanufactured” he tells me. Well, I guess that’s something. ”Do you have a white sheet, ASTM or some type of proof backing up that claim?” I ask. ”Sure, I’ll send it over to you.” Over a year and I’m still waiting for that white sheet.SO, on one hand, the stock is made from sources other than trees - sounds good to me - on the other hand we’re not sure where it’s coming from or how it’s made.Do you see the problem?