Chronicles by Print Lord

The State of Print in 2026: What’s Changing, What’s Thriving, and Where Print Lord Stands

Jun 30, 2026

Close-up of a classic Heidelberg letterpress machine in a cozy workshop setting.

Print Is Alive, Evolving, and Anything But Finished

Half a year in and 2026 has already made one thing abundantly clear: print is not going anywhere. In fact, if you’ve been paying attention, it’s doing rather well. While certain corners of the internet continue to peddle the myth that everything should be digital-first, the print industry has been quietly, confidently getting on with the job, adapting, innovating, and proving its worth in ways that a push notification simply cannot match.

So, as we close out June and head into the second half of the year, here is Print Lord’s honest assessment of where things stand, what’s changing, what’s thriving, and what it means for your brand.

The Rise of Personalised and Variable Data Print

If there is one trend that has genuinely accelerated in 2026, it is personalisation. Not the vague, hand-wavy kind where someone slaps a first name on an email and calls it a relationship, but proper, data-driven, variable print where every single piece is unique. Different names, different offers, different images, different QR codes, all produced in a single print run.

Variable data printing (VDP) has moved firmly from the realm of enterprise marketing budgets into something accessible to businesses of every size. The results speak for themselves: personalised direct mail consistently outperforms generic print on response rates, and the gap is widening as audiences become increasingly numb to mass-broadcast messaging.

For Print Lord’s clients, this means more opportunities to reach customers as individuals rather than postcodes. A well-targeted, beautifully printed mailer with a specific offer, a personalised QR code, and a relevant local map is not a luxury. At this point, it is simply good marketing.

Sustainable Stocks and Ethical Sourcing: The Truth Behind the Paper Trail

World Environment Day came and went earlier this month, and with it the usual round of finger-pointing at paper and print. So let’s set the record straight, again.

The print industry has made serious, measurable strides in sustainability. Responsibly sourced paper from managed forestry, FSC-certified stocks, vegetable-based inks, and dramatically reduced waste through smarter production methods are now standard practice across quality print suppliers. Print Lord works with suppliers who take this seriously, not as a marketing exercise, but as an operating principle.

The organisation Two Sides continues to do vital work in challenging the greenwash directed at print and paper, publishing independently verified research that corrects the myths about deforestation and carbon footprint that circulate freely and inaccurately online. The facts are this: European forests are growing, responsibly managed paper is a renewable resource, and the carbon footprint of a well-produced print piece often compares very favourably to the energy demands of digital infrastructure.

Print Lord stands fully behind this work. Against the propaganda of the paperless lie.

Print as Part of Integrated Multichannel Campaigns

One of the most interesting shifts in 2026 is the growing maturity with which marketers are approaching the relationship between print and digital. The old argument of print versus digital has largely been retired by anyone who actually knows what they are doing. The smarter conversation now is about how print and digital work together.

Personalised QR codes on direct mail pieces that drive recipients to tailored landing pages. Printed event materials that feed into a live social campaign. Branded packaging that doubles as shareable content the moment someone unboxes it. Exhibition materials that anchor a physical presence while a digital campaign runs in parallel.

Print is not competing with digital. It is doing what digital cannot: creating a physical, tactile, memorable brand moment that has staying power. A well-designed brochure sits on a desk. A carefully crafted mailer gets pinned to a noticeboard. A beautifully printed programme is kept as a memento. None of this happens with a banner ad.

For businesses planning the second half of 2026, the most effective campaigns will treat print as a strategic channel, not an afterthought.

The Return of Tactile Premium Finishes

Foil stamping. Embossing. Spot UV. Soft-touch lamination. After a period where budget pressures pushed many brands toward stripped-back, functional print, premium finishes are making a confident return.

And it makes complete sense. In a world saturated with digital content, the physical sensation of holding something beautifully made carries enormous weight. A business card with a foil crest. A brochure cover with embossed lettering. A packaging insert with spot UV highlights. These details do not just look good, they communicate something fundamental about the brand producing them: that quality matters, that the customer is worth impressing, and that corners have not been cut.

Print Lord has always championed this end of the craft. The ability to specify the right finish for the right job, and to produce it with precision, is exactly where experience counts. This is not the territory of a click-to-basket print portal. It requires knowledge, care, and an honest conversation about what will actually work.

The Continued Fight Against the Paperless Lie

It would be remiss to close out June without returning to what remains one of the most persistent and damaging myths in the business world: that going paperless is inherently virtuous.

Businesses are still receiving emails from suppliers and banks telling them that switching to digital statements is better for the environment, with no evidence provided and no acknowledgement of the energy infrastructure required to deliver and store digital information at scale. It is greenwash, and it has been allowed to run largely unchallenged for too long.

Print Lord’s position has not wavered. Responsible print is sustainable. Managed forestry supports biodiversity. Quality print produces results that last. Two Sides (twosides.info) provides the research. Print Lord provides the print. The paperless lie does not hold up to scrutiny, and it never did.

Where Print Lord Stands

As a trusted advisor and brand guardian, Print Lord’s role in 2026 is exactly what it has always been, done with more tools, more options, and more ways to make print work harder for every client.

From variable data campaigns to exhibition graphics, from premium stationery to branded merchandise, from a single corrected label to a full multichannel print campaign, Print Lord handles it all with the same standard: on brand, on time, with one contact and one invoice keeping it simple.

Jim Cunliffe and the Print Lord team, including Lady Charlotte, Princess Nancy, Maribel, Scribe Gavin, and Bookkeeper Michele, are here for the jobs that matter, the complex briefs, the tight deadlines, the brands that deserve to look their best and the clients who understand the value of getting it right.

The second half of 2026 is full of opportunity. Summer events, Q4 planning, Christmas campaigns, year-end gifting, and a growing appetite for print that stands out. If you want to make your mark, now is the time to start the conversation.

Visit shop.printlord.co.uk or drop a line to hello@printlord.co.uk. The Print Lord is at your service.

Print Lord. At your service. On brand. On time.

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