Offset, gravure, and flexography are the three pillars of packaging printing. Each dominates a different segment — and each has structural limitations that are being challenged by evolving technology. Here’s where they stand.
Offset Lithography
Offset is fundamentally a paper-based process. Sheet-fed presses offer variable format — flexible across job sizes. Web-fed offset, the workhorse of publication and folding carton printing, has traditionally been limited to fixed cutoff lengths. That’s changing: variable-repeat web offset presses now exist, and seamless-sleeve cylinder technology brings web offset closer to gravure’s continuous-printing capability.
The platform is expanding into new substrates. With modifications, offset now prints corrugated board. With UV curing retrofits, it handles UV inks on non-absorbent surfaces. And water-based offset inks are approaching commercial viability — which would transform offset’s environmental profile in packaging.
Gravure
Gravure still delivers the best print quality of any mass-production method — rich solids, smooth vignettes, stable color across millions of impressions. Cylinder life is unmatched, and gravure can print the thinnest films of any process. These advantages made it the default choice for high-volume flexible packaging.
Two problems are eroding its position. First, cylinder engraving is expensive and complex — the economics require long runs, and the market is shifting toward shorter runs. Second, benzene-containing gravure inks carry environmental costs that regulations are increasingly unwilling to tolerate. The combination of high setup cost for short runs and regulatory pressure on solvent emissions is driving volume toward competing processes.
Flexography
Flexo is the simplest of the three press architectures — which makes it the cheapest to buy, easiest to operate, and fastest to maintain. It’s also the only one of the three that widely uses water-based ink today — a structural environmental advantage that matters as VOC regulations tighten globally.
Flexo’s substrate range is the broadest: paper, board, corrugated, film, foil — it handles almost everything. Its modular design enables inline integration of hot stamping, varnishing, die-cutting, creasing, perforating, and window-patching into a single production line. For packaging converters managing diverse jobs on tight timelines, this integrated workflow is a decisive productivity advantage.
The flexo industry consensus on cost is unambiguous: flexo costs less than the alternatives, and this cost advantage is widely recognized in mature markets.
Quick Reference
| Factor | Offset | Gravure | Flexo |
|---|---|---|---|
| Primary substrate | Paper, board | Film, paper | Essentially all |
| Print quality | Very good | Best (richest solids) | Good, improving |
| Setup cost | Medium | High (cylinder engraving) | Low (photopolymer plates) |
| Best run length | Medium–long | Long (millions) | Short–medium |
| Ink system | Oil-based, moving to water | Solvent (benzene issue) | Water-based (standard) |
| Inline finishing | Limited | Limited | Extensive (in-line production line) |
| Market trend | Expanding substrate range | Losing share to shorter runs | Gaining share, driven by cost |
References
- Wikipedia: Offset Lithography: Comprehensive overview of sheet-fed and web-fed offset printing including variable-format and seamless-sleeve developments.
- Wikipedia: Rotogravure: Gravure printing technology including cylinder engraving, ink systems, and market position relative to competing processes.
- Wikipedia: Flexography: Flexographic printing including water-based ink systems, inline finishing integration, and applications across packaging segments.
- Wikipedia: Printing Ink: Overview of ink technologies including oil-based, solvent-based, water-based, and UV systems and their environmental profiles.
- Flexible Packaging Association (FPA): Industry resource covering printing technology comparisons, market trends, and sustainability in packaging printing.