Engraved letterhead
The traditional method. Your artwork is incised into a metal plate and pressed into the sheet, leaving crisply raised ink and a faint bruise on the reverse — unmistakable in the hand.
View engraved letterhead →Wells & Drew has been printing fine stationery since 1855. Have the letterhead you generated here printed for real — engraved, raised, embossed, foil-stamped, or debossed — so your physical and digital correspondence share one identity.
Wells & Drew prints letterhead in every traditional method — from the deep impression of engraving to economical full-colour printing. Each links straight to that option at wellsdrew.com.
The traditional method. Your artwork is incised into a metal plate and pressed into the sheet, leaving crisply raised ink and a faint bruise on the reverse — unmistakable in the hand.
View engraved letterhead →Thermography — a raised, lightly glossy ink finish that echoes the feel of engraving. No plate, no die, and a gentler price for everyday volume.
View raised-print letterhead →The artwork pushed up out of the paper as a raised relief. Quietly elegant tone-on-tone — with ink, or blind with no ink at all.
View embossed letterhead →Metallic or pigment foil pressed into the sheet with a heated die — gold, silver, copper, or a custom colour with real shine.
View hot-foil letterhead →Flat offset and digital printing. Full colour, photographic logos, fine gradients — the most economical choice for larger runs.
View printed letterhead →The reverse of embossing — the artwork pressed down into the paper for a crisp recessed impression you can feel with a fingertip.
View debossed letterhead →Wells & Drew also makes matching envelopes, calling and business cards, folded note cards, and custom monograms and crests — see the full collection at wellsdrew.com →
Tell Wells & Drew what you’re looking for. They typically reply within one business day. We’ll forward your details directly — your PDF stays on your device; they’ll ask for it directly when they follow up.
Wells & Drew has been engraving fine stationery since 1855. Their work is in family offices, law firms, embassies, and on the desks of people who still care that the paper they send a letter on says something about them.
They’re selective about who they work with — but they’re happy to talk to Letterhead Lab customers, because the people who’ve already invested in a designed letterhead are the kind of people who appreciate how it’ll feel printed on the right paper.