I've been making wines for approximately 8 years, give or take a few glasses. Normally I'd label my bottles with whatever I had. Tape, cheap labels, or even the preprinted labels. I might even make a crafty neck hangar if a bottle was to become a gift. Usually, the bottle sits around naked though.
The Naked Bottle Look
A few weeks ago, I finally decided it was time to get one set in stone design to use for all of my wines. So I started looking around at different label companies. I looked at many different ones, but I kept coming back here to onlinelabels.com more and more to look around. Once I realized I kept coming back here to look, I decided there must be something here I like. So I pulled the trigger and ordered some samples. Before I get into what I ordered, I want to say that along with the order I asked a question. This was at 6:11pm on a Tuesday evening. At exactly 7:45pm I received an answer from Erica. At first I thought, "Hmmm.. They must be in California!" I was shocked to find them in Florida. Same time zone as I was! Very impressive. I wasn't expecting an answer until the next day.
The samples I ordered and received quickly were:
OL475 4" x 5" weatherproof polyester.
OL150 4" x 3.33" clear gloss
OL544 3.5" x 2.4031" arched top, white gloss
All of these were for a Laser Printer.
After some discussion here, I crossed off the clear labels. That's not going to work with wine bottles without a $4000 laser printer that has white toner. I also found the arched top labels were too small for my taste and crossed those off. I really liked the 4" x 5" size, but what material should I get?
I got a hold of my graphic designer and told her we're going to be up all night! She's actually still working on a new logo while I type this. Luckily, she'll work straight into the morning for me. Best of all, she won't charge me a penny for it, I pay her bill with wine!
Full disclosure: She's my daughter.
We've been emailing ideas and files back and forth for the past 6 hours, she's been in Photoshop, and I've been in the Maestro Label Designer right here at onlinelabels.com. I took a photo of my field out back last year, and my wife loves the photo, so that's what I went with. We bounced many different designs and fonts back and forth until we decided on one that works. Finally we came up with a design.
She made several different colors of the same design so I could change the text at will. This took approximately 45 seconds to get this new looking label with the Maestro Label Designer.
As the design was starting to come together, I was printing from Maestro onto regular sheets of paper and then holding them up into the light with a sample page of labels to see if I was lined up properly. I thought I was going to have a slight physical margin problem with my printer, but it turned out just fine when I actually ran the labels through the printer.
Having been a certified HP printer technician in a past life, I have taken apart and removed labels from various rollers and components inside way too many printers. So my biggest concern was whether or not the labels could detach from the backing and get stuck inside my printer. I'm very glad to report, I doubt this would ever be a problem with these labels.
I have a Brother MFC-9970CDW Laser Printer. The printer driver has a Label Setting, so that's what I used. I ran both the weatherproof polyester and the white gloss labels through. I can see no discernible difference in print quality. Neither one will smudge with my fingers. I'm happy with both, but I'm going to go with the weatherproof polyester. It is wine, and we do stick them in ice sometimes.
However, if you've actually read this far, I know what your biggest concern is.
"Can I remove the labels easily to reuse the bottle?"
Well...
I put a label on, and removed it rather easily with no glue residue left on the bottle. However, the label would be deemed unusable as I rolled the edges with my fingernail to get a grip on the label to pull it off. It did not tear, and came off in one piece. This was immediately after I put the label on, so this couldn't actually be a true test.
After I get done typing here, I'm going to print some more labels and put them on more bottles. I'm going to set one in the wine fridge, one at room temp, one in the regular fridge, one in the freezer, and one outside. It is suppose to be 75 degrees here tomorrow, I'll make sure it's in the sun. These are extremes for wine, so should be good enough for testing purposes.
I'll report back tomorrow night with my findings! Hopefully I'll have a new logo by then too! I've also got her working on three fun wine label designs.
1. Skeeter Pee (Lemon wine)
2. Spider Sweat (Lime wine)
3. Rock on the Range (For the wine we take to Rock on the Range every year!)
Keep making wine!
Rob
Edited by user Saturday, April 12, 2014 2:28:24 AM(EST)
| Reason: Not specified