It often comes as a surprise to learn that 'spot colour' printing (one or two colours of ink) can be more expensive than full colour printing, especially on smaller quantities of print.
The reason is to do with labour. Full colour printing always uses the same four colours of ink — cyan, magenta, yellow and black — so a full colour press is always loaded with those inks, known as 'process colours'.
By contrast, a spot colour job needs ink colours mixing specially for it. This ink is loaded onto a press, the job is printed, and the press must then be washed down ready for the next colours of inks it will use.
This mixing, loading and washing down is relatively labour intensive and this is reflected in the cost of spot colour jobs. Unless your job needs a specific colour which cannot be accurately reproduced using the four process colours, it is usually best to avoid spot colours.
Of course, there may be situations where a special ink is required, such as a metallic or fluorescent colour. Often this is added afterwards as a fifth colour and we can quote for such situations using our computerised quoting system.