Personalised & Custom Design Glass Jar Labels

Simplicity is key in jar labels
- Dispatched in 3 - 5 days, or Express
- Premium printing
- 10 shapes, 6 materials and 3 finishes
- Easy to apply. Come on A4 sheets
- Perfect for logos, product labels and messaging
- Delivery within 5 working days

What do our customers say?
Vegan & eco options
All our printer inks are vegan and certified for compostability.
- Waterproof
- Clear
- Plastic
- Recycled Paper
- Brown Kraft Paper
- Cream Textured Paper
- Silver Paper
- Recycled Paper
- Brown Kraft Paper
100% recycled waste paper, which are compostable and can be recycled.
Make your own personalised glass jar labels
Are you a small business or individual looking to customise your own personalised glass jar labels? Glass jar are probably one of our most popular customer types for adding labels whether jam jar, pickles, storage, honey, spices and more. We are used to helping out many jar customers so please give us a call if you need any help, it can be difficult to measure your jar and match to one of our sizes. We offer a free sample pack with all our label materials, shapes and sizes which can help. Let us know and we'll happily pop in the post to you.
The art of preserving food in the form of jam can be traced back to the 1st Century in the first known cookbook known as De Re Coquinaria (The Art of Cooking). In its simplest form, it was fruit heated with sugar or honey. Nowadays, jam, honey, and other spreads have taken on its own playing field with cooks experimenting with all types of new ingredients to get the next bestselling and with nearly 60 million UK consumers buying spreadable goods it’s no wonder why us Brits go crazy for the stuff.
With competition as tough as this, it’s even more important to stand out from the crowd so we have taken some of the guessing work out of the picture. Below are some examples of what makes a successful label.
Top tip
Since consumers have limited attention spans, it is important for food and drink labels to be as simple as possible in their design. Our research discovered that when a simple label was used rather than a complex one, people were 5 – 10% more likely to notice it initially and spent 9 – 15% more time looking at it.