Organize My Work With Rubber Stamps
When items are ready to ship out, or when shipments need to be received in, when invoices are paid, when deposits have to be made, envelopes addressed and packages marked, you’re going to want and need custom rubber stamps to help with those tasks and many more.
Like Millions of people, our customers use rubber stamps extensively and often send us photos like the one here!
You too can enjoy the utility and functionality of stamps every single day.
Having a great tool will help you create signatures, seals and other messages instantly, saving you time and effort and ensuring great visibility for important information. Take your experience up to another level with our fantastic custom wood stamps. These models are created out of authentic wood which gives them a sleek, impressive finish and a comfortably smooth feel.
They will add a little something extra to your stamping experience, being a beautiful item to display on your desk while feeling great to hold and use. We offer a diverse range of traditional stamp pads to meet your needs. Choose from an array of sizes to find the one that will work best with your favorite non-self-inking stamps and hand stamps. With these traditional stamp pads, we have several colors to choose from including black, blue, brown, red, orange, pink, green and other lively shades. We offer various ink types as well such as options safe for skin, options designed for different surfaces, and waterproof inks.
Rubber stamps can also be used for art projects, and in fact, even the very famous artist Andy Warhol used them like in the example here.
Warhol used handmade rubber stamps to create repeated patterns and symbols in his commercial work and in a few of his paintings. In the 1950s, numerous companies hired Warhol to illustrate their products, and his drawings often combined rubber stamping with a blotted line technique. The images on his rubber stamps included natural forms like birds, butterflies, fruit, stars, and flowers. The finished work contained texture and pattern and was filled with a playfulness that made the products more appealing. In 1955, Warhol worked on one of the shoe industry’s most sophisticated marketing campaigns when he became an illustrator for I. Miller & Sons shoes.
At the time, I. Miller was attempting to create a new image for itself and experimented with marketing strategies that used repetition to imprint its product on the consumers’ minds. Stamping allowed Warhol to quickly create a variety of illustrations along a similar theme. He could alter the color and composition of the artworks, giving his clients a selection from which to choose. The experiment was extremely successful, and Warhol became known in the industry as “the shoe person.”
Whether you are organizing work, or have decided to test the limits of creative expression, we have over 4000 products that can help!