Special Printing Techniques

Add Gold Foil

Applied with heat and pressure, a metallic foil layer gives your logo and name a brilliance and tactile quality that ordinary ink simply can't reach.

What Is Gold Foil?

Gold foil (hot foil stamping) is the process of transferring a thin metallic foil layer onto the card surface using a heated metal die. The die is heated to 150–200°C and positioned so the foil sits between it and the card, then pressed with pressure; the adhesive layer activates and the metallic surface remains on the card. The result is a genuine metallic reflection that can't be imitated with ink, along with a subtle raised feel. On transparent PVC cards, foil works especially well: the clear background combines the brilliance of the metal with light coming through from behind to create a striking sense of depth.

Perceived Luxury and Brand Value

Gold foil isn't just a visual detail; it's the impression your brand leaves in the very first second.

A Powerful First Impression

Research shows a direct link between tactile quality and perceived trustworthiness. The weight and smoothness of metallic embossing reinforce the impression that your brand is quality-focused.

Staying Power

A standard business card ends up forgotten in a desk drawer, but a gold-foil card stays out on the desk and tucked in a wallet. Objects that engage both sight and touch stay in the memory far longer.

Industry Credibility

In finance, law, consulting, beauty and fashion, gold foil is recognised as a visual signal of premium positioning. It's one of the fastest ways to stand out from your competitors.

Gold Tone Options

Each tone tells a different brand story. Choosing the right one completes the message of your design.

Shiny Gold

The most classic choice. Its high reflectivity catches the light and draws attention even from a distance. It produces the strongest contrast against dark background colours (navy, black, deep burgundy). The go-to pick for a traditional sense of luxury.

Matte Gold

Instead of the dazzling reflection of shiny gold, it has a velvety smooth surface. It's a favourite for a more sophisticated, understated sense of luxury, and it works beautifully with minimalist designs and light-toned backgrounds.

Rose Gold

A warm pink-gold tone. It remains popular in beauty, fashion and personal branding. Paired with cream, beige and light grey backgrounds, it creates an elegant, contemporary aesthetic.

File Preparation

The file you prepare for the foil area directly affects print quality. Follow the steps below exactly.

1

Use a Vector-Based Design

Every element to be foiled (logo, text, border lines) must be in vector format. Programs like Adobe Illustrator or Affinity Designer are preferred. JPEG or TIFF files are not accepted, because pixel-based images can't be used to produce the foil die.

2

Create a Separate Layer

Move the foil area onto its own separate layer, independent of the main design. Label this layer with a descriptive name like 'Gold Foil' or 'Altin Yaldiz.' Every element on the layer must be pure black (100% K, 0% CMY) and opaque.

3

Define a Spot Colour

Create a dedicated spot colour in your palette for the foil area. Name this colour 'GoldFoil' and define it with a value of K100. The spot colour lets the print shop tell the foil layer apart from the CMYK print and produce the correct die.

4

Save as PDF

Save the design as a print-ready PDF. Preserve the layers and keep the 'Preserve Overprint Settings' option enabled. Before sending the file, temporarily hide the foil layer and confirm that the other design elements are all in place.

Minimum size requirements: 7.5 pt for text, 1.5 pt thickness for lines and borders. Below these values, the foil can't transfer evenly.

Having foil cover more than 50% of the card surface lowers print quality. Focus gold foil on accent points; for large flat areas, metallic ink may give a better result.

Pairing with a Transparent Card

Transparent PVC background + gold foil: one of the most striking business card combinations.

On opaque cards, foil creates contrast with the background colour, whilst on transparent PVC cards the foil combines with the backlight effect to produce a three-dimensional sense of depth. Depending on the angle of the light, the foil reveals different tones, and the cardholder enjoys a slightly different visual experience each time. This combination delivers remarkably impressive results, especially when used in the logo and name areas.

  • If you apply gold foil to the back, the metallic shine layers over the transparent background when viewed from the front; the depth effect increases.

  • Don't make the foil area too large on transparent cards: a small, carefully placed logo or name is far more impressive than big foil blocks.

  • The rose gold tone gives especially beautiful results on a transparent background; the pink-gold reflections strike a unique harmony with the clear material.

What to Watch Out For

  • Applying too much foil diminishes the sense of luxury. The effect of gold foil grows when its quantity is kept limited; at least 50% of the design should be plain print or empty space.

  • Very thin fonts and small details can break down in foil printing. Text under 7.5 pt and lines thinner than 1.5 pt can fill in or scatter during foil application.

  • Keep them away from heat and moisture. Foiled cards can develop scratches over time if left in direct sunlight for long periods or packed tightly in a pocket; storing the cards in a box or card wallet extends their life.

Frequently Asked Questions

Gold foil is a real metallic foil layer applied with heat and pressure. It reflects light sharply and consistently, offering a genuine brilliance and subtle raised feel that ink can't achieve. Metallic ink, on the other hand, is a pigment-based printing technique that gives a matte metallic shimmer. Foil is suited to covering smaller areas and provides a far more premium look; metallic ink is a more economical option for large areas.

Because foil printing involves a die production cost, minimum order quantities are usually a bit higher than for standard printing. You can find the minimum and pricing for gold-foil transparent business cards on our order page or through our design advice line at TransparentCard. A digital foil option is also available for smaller budgets.

Yes, gold foil can be applied to both sides. On transparent cards in particular, foil applied to the back shines through the clear background when viewed from the front, creating a depth effect. However, since a separate die must be produced for each side, the cost is shaped accordingly. The most common choice is foil for the logo or name on the front, with standard printing on the back.

Gold foil requires a vector file; a die can't be produced from pixel-based files (JPEG, PNG, TIFF). If your current logo is only a low-resolution PNG, the TransparentCard design team can convert it to vector for a set fee or prepare a foil-ready design from scratch. Get in touch with our design advice line.

Foil applied through professional hot foil stamping bonds permanently to the card surface; under normal conditions of use it won't fade, run or crack. On laminated cards, the foil layer is protected by the lamination, which increases its scratch resistance. As long as you avoid excessive heat, prolonged direct sunlight and mechanical friction, a foiled card can keep its original look for years.

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