PrintFlex Graphics first to install Gallus One in North America

The Gallus One will help the St Louis-based printer tap into new markets and expand its sticker and label business

PrintFlex Graphics to install Heidelberg’s first Gallus One in North America

PrintFlex Graphics to install Heidelberg’s first Gallus One in North America

PrintFlex Graphics, a flexographic printer specializing in on-pack and in-pack promotions, recently purchased a new Gallus One digital label press from Heidelberg. To be installed later this year, the machine is the first of its kind in North America and the first digital press for PrintFlex. The Gallus One will help the St Louis-based printer tap into new markets and expand its sticker and label business.

PrintFlex Graphics began its business in 1995 with just three employees, and today has grown to employ roughly 35 and occupies two large buildings in St Louis, Missouri. For the better part of its history, the company, which primarily serves the consumer-packaged goods market, has strayed from traditional label and sticker production – focusing on more complex applications like peel and reseal coupons and folded promotional booklets, which are applied on or inserted inside of a package.

As it did with many companies, the Covid-19 pandemic highlighted certain weaknesses in PrintFlex’s business. Consumers ‘scrambled’ to purchase whatever they could find in stores, and companies did not have a need to produce specialty promotional materials to sell their products.

Liz Pecha-Poelker, CEO of PrintFlex said: ‘After years of growing our business, it became a little static. We’re looking for new markets that we can grow into. The pandemic really highlighted that need for us.’

The company, equipped with a 14-unit Gallus EM 280, then began tracking the amount of existing work it could move to a digital press.

‘We realized it’s just not efficient producing the short-run sticker and label work we do have on our current press,’ said Pecha-Poelker. ‘We frequently use all 14 units. We’re doing all this crazy peel and reseal and using different varnish plates here and another varnish there. It just doesn’t make sense for our less complex jobs.’

Needing to diversify its customer portfolio and a better way to produce short-run labels, PrintFlex will install its first digital press, the Gallus One, later this year. With a compact footprint, the Gallus One fits well into a variety of different production environments and has a surprisingly high crossover point with traditional flexo printing.

The company, which serves a nationwide clientele, is hopeful the machine will help attract more local, smaller businesses that it currently struggles to effectively serve as well as provide more services to its current customers. Additionally, PrintFlex will look to see how it can create various versions of labels by producing one layer on its digital press and marrying it with another layer produced on its EM 280.

‘We’re excited to see PrintFlex install the first Gallus One in North America,’ said Dan Maurer, vice president of digital product management for Heidelberg USA. ‘This machine is a perfect fit for their business, and we can’t wait to see how it helps them grow.’

Prior to purchasing the Gallus One, Pecha-Poelker said she and PrintFlex president Steve Baum were ‘thrilled’ with the print samples they received off the machine. The new roll-to-roll press utilizes Fujifilm Samba printheads and Heidelberg’s Prinect Digital Front End – printing CMYK+W up to 13 3/8in (340mm) wide at 98 ft/min (30 m/min) or 230 ft/min (70 m/min) and achieves 85 percent white opacity at top running speed. 

Another key feature that attracted PrintFlex to the Gallus One was its patented substrate web control tension in the Digital Print Unit (DPU). During the head cleaning process, the inkjet heads remain stationary as the web moves down – holding the web tension as the cleaning system moves into position. This function, which was designed to maximize print quality and minimize waste, requires zero operator intervention, and is controlled completely by the machine’s software and helps contribute to the machine’s 95% uptime rating.

‘We’re big Gallus fans,’ said Pecha-Poelker. ‘We love our EM 280, and we have confidence in the technology and quality of the product. We have a strong partnership with Gallus and know they’ll be there to support us and the Gallus One as we begin this new journey.’