• It
Sign in Get Pulp Pulp 27
Pulp
Sign in Get Pulp Pulp 27
Pulp
  • Inspiration82
  • Stories81
  • News163
  • Pulp Archive
  • Materials Index
  • About Pulp
  • Tell Us
  • Sign in
  • Get Pulp
  • Pulp 27
  • It
Browse Themes
Corporate communicationDigital printingGraphic designIllustrationInterviewsLabelLarge formatPackagingPeople & PaperPhotographyPrintingPublishingSustainabilityInspirationStoriesNews
Pulp

Log-In

Please enter your credentials to access all Pulp contents.

Forgot your password?

New to Pulp? Register for free

New to Pulp?

Register for free to have full access to our content.

Register

Moo’s ‘Printify’ business cards.

3 min minutes
Pulp 01Stories

Moo

In Pulp’s ’The world of digital print’, we feature Moo from London
Digital printingGraphic designPrinting

Moo’s ‘Printify’ business cards.

Moo’s ‘Luxe’ and ‘Classic’ styles of digitally printed, personalised business cards.
Richard Moross Founder and CEO of Moo.

Moo / London

Moo straddles the digital and the physical with its online-only business model, offering business cards, mini cards, postcards, greetings cards and stickers, which it prints digitally and mails out worldwide.

Launched by Richard Moross in 2006, Moo was one of the original firms on Old Street’s ‘Silicon Roundabout’ in London. Printing was initially outsourced but, as the business grew in volume and geographic reach, it brought production in-house. That meant moving further East in London, as well as the establishment of a second factory in Providence, Rhode Island, North America to serve that region.

Moross is more aware of the relevance of print, and a better evangelist for it, than many in the print industry. ‘We want to keep people using this beautiful, sustainable and tactile medium,’ he says, ‘to make print more accessible without driving down the quality.’ Moo understands the complementary attributes of physical and digital: it’s hard to beat Moo’s own explanation: ‘We love the Web, but you can’t put it in your pocket.’

‘Our client base spans amateurs through to professional designers,’ says Moross. ‘Before we add to the range, we think very carefully about the implications of each new product.

By restricting the range, and making the process of creating and ordering easy, Moo has built a global customer base with millions of users in more than 200 countries. While many customers use the firm’s designs and templates, designers can also upload their own designs.

Moo offers a basic range of papers and finishes. There are three papers: Classic, Green and Luxe; and two finishes: matt or gloss. Classic is a heavyweight 350gsm paper with a silk finish. Green is a similar weight matt finish. Both those weights are at the limits of what digital presses can print. Luxe, at 600gsm, is nearly double the thickness. Moo overcame the challenge of digitally printing a product as thick as this by using multiple layers, sandwiched together after printing. Turning what was potentially a drawback into a feature, it uses two different-coloured papers, so there is a colour-contrasting stripe down the centre of the edges. By embodying print’s potential for beauty and tactility, it shows how digital technology points to a new future for print.

See:

‘The world of digital print’

‘Digital craft’

‘Screaming Colour’

‘Ripe Digital’

moo.com

Register

Pulp 01 Articles

Stories 11/04/2024

Maths in proportion

A new book challenges designers to do their sums. By John L. Walters
Graphic designPrintingPublishing
Stories 11/04/2024

Circles of influence

Bryan Edmondson of British design company SEA. By John L Walters
Graphic designPeople & Paper
Stories 11/04/2024

Ripe Digital

In Pulp’s ‘The world of digital print’, we feature Ripe Digital from Corsham, Wiltshire
Digital printingGraphic designPrinting
Inspiration 11/04/2024

Alpha Beppe

Illustrator Beppe Giacobbe smiles in the face of global chaos. By John L. Walters
IllustrationPrintingPublishing

In Pulp 01

Pulp © 2025
Fedrigoni
Fedrigoni
COOKIE POLICY PRIVACY POLICY ACCESSIBILITY STATEMENT
Pulp © 2025