When you’re putting your brand on a product, you want it to land well with the client. We select our cup specifications based on how they actually perform in the real world – especially when you’re serving drinks at speed. That means we look closely at the wall builds, print methods, and recyclable barriers to stop the usual failures: cups going soft, hands getting burnt, and artwork looking wrong after you’ve signed it off.
- Single or double wall? It’s a common question. We’ll talk about the options because the wall build controls two things you notice straight away: how hot the cup feels in your hand and how sturdy it stays once it’s filled. If you’re serving hotter drinks or people are holding the cup for longer, a double wall reduces that “too hot” problem. However, if you’re shifting volume fast, a single wall keeps things simple and light.
- Your brand from every angle: We specify full-colour wrap printing because we want your branding to be continuous around the cup, rather than leaving you with a small panel that gets missed when the cup rotates. Our proofing process is there to catch any dull colours, cut-off artwork, or misplaced designs before the run, so you don’t end up distributing cups you can’t use.
- Keeping it comfortable: We include double-wall options in the range because that extra layer keeps the heat away from the outside surface. If you’re trying to avoid using sleeves at busy service points, this really helps reduce how often you need to add another item to the serve.
- No greenwashing: Sustainability is a real buzzword, so it’s important we are clear. Our approach is to source cups described as recyclable including the inner lining, because that lining is where many “paper cups” fall down. If you’re trying to keep waste handling simple, this avoids the common trap of a cup that looks recyclable but actually needs specialist streams.
- Food safety & compliance: We choose cups described as made and certified to European standards for food-contact use. We know you shouldn’t have to chase suppliers for basic safety wording. If your procurement or compliance checks are tight, this gives you something clear to sign off against.
- Lead times & quantities: Lead time is a popular question. We work to an MOQ of 1000 and a stated lead time of 14 days from artwork approval because cups are usually ordered against specific dates, not just “whenever.” If you’re planning an event, a campaign drop, or an office restock, this keeps ordering predictable and stops any last-minute panic.
- Fitting your dispensers: We keep to common sizes described as fitting most standard cup dispensers. There is nothing worse than crushed rims and jammed stacks – they waste time and make your counter look messy. If you’re running self-serve or a fast hand-off, this keeps the stack feeding cleanly and your printed cups looking really presentable.