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Choosing between gloss and matte lamination seems like a minor decision — but it quietly shapes how every printed piece is received. The finish affects perceived quality, readability, how the piece photographs, and how it holds up over time. Most people default to whatever they’ve done before. Here’s what you’d actually choose if you thought it through.
What Lamination Actually Does
Lamination bonds a thin plastic film to the surface of a printed sheet, serving two purposes: protection and finish. The protective function is consistent across both gloss and matte — laminated prints are more resistant to scratches, moisture, and general handling wear than unlaminated ones. The finish function is where they diverge entirely.
It’s worth noting upfront that paper below 128gsm generally can’t be laminated — the substrate is too light to bond reliably with the film. For most marketing collateral (name cards, brochures, flyers, booklet covers), you’re typically working above this threshold anyway.
Gloss Lamination: When It Works
Gloss creates a shiny, reflective surface that intensifies colours and makes images look more vivid. The contrast is noticeable immediately — a gloss-laminated brochure looks more vibrant on a table next to an unlaminated equivalent. For materials where the primary goal is visual impact, gloss earns its place: product catalogues heavy on photography, food and beverage menus where colour appetite appeal matters, retail promotional materials designed to attract attention at a distance, and event flyers competing with dozens of others on the same table.
Gloss does attract fingerprints — the reflective surface shows smudges readily, which is worth knowing for anything that passes through many hands. It also creates glare under strong artificial lighting, which can reduce legibility if the piece contains significant body text read under direct light.
Matte Lamination: When It Works
Matte lamination produces a flat, non-reflective surface that reads as quieter and more considered. No glare, minimal fingerprint visibility, and a texture that can range from slightly smooth to subtly tactile depending on the film weight used. Matte has become the default for premium corporate applications — business cards, high-end brochures, company profiles — largely because it photographs better (no hotspots or reflections in product shots) and because its restrained appearance aligns with professional and luxury brand positioning.
Text-heavy print materials — reports, proposals, training documents — benefit from matte for the same reason matte works in books: there’s no surface glare competing with the act of reading. If your print piece will be read under office lighting rather than glanced at across a room, matte is almost always the more practical choice.
Soft-Touch Lamination: The Premium Third Option
Soft-touch (also called velvet lamination) is a matte film with an additional rubberised surface texture that creates a velvety, almost suede-like feel. It’s significantly more expensive than standard matte or gloss, and it’s not available from every printer — but it creates a tactile experience that is genuinely memorable. For premium name cards, luxury brand materials, high-end event invitations, or anything where holding the piece should feel like an experience in itself, soft-touch is worth the investment. Once someone holds a soft-touch name card, they tend to remember it.
A Quick Decision Guide
Choose gloss if: your design is image-heavy, you need maximum colour vibrancy, or your audience will see it displayed rather than reading it in hand. Choose matte if: there’s significant body text, the context is professional or corporate, or you want photography of the finished piece to look clean. Choose soft-touch if: the tactile experience of holding the piece matters to your brand, or you want something that stands apart from every other print piece in the room.
For help selecting the right finish for your specific project, explore ExpressPrint’s full range of finishing options — or contact the team via WhatsApp for a quick recommendation.







