Rizco Design

Eco-Friendly Ways To Decorate Packages

Rizco Design Quoted on TotallyHer.com

Lots of people talk about not polluting the environment unnecessarily at holiday time, with all the items that are given and disposed of almost as quickly as they are received. It’s easy to talk about it, but doing something is entirely different. The following people have put their money where their mouth is, as the saying goes, and took positive steps to stop the needless waste.

Keith Rizzi, a partner and creative director at Rizco Design, a firm that creates green designs, offered these thoughts about gift wrap recycling:

 • When purchasing wrappings in a store, select papers that have a high recycled content or are printed on Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) Certified Paper. Things to avoid purchasing are wrappings with foil stamping, laminates, or adhesive backing, as they are hard to recycle.

• The fiber in high-grade paper can be recycled up to seven times. Unfortunately, according to the Environmental Paper Network, “16 million tons of high grade fiber paper from offices and printers go into landfills annually that could be recovered.” The bottom line is that whatever you use, make sure it gets into the recycling bin.

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Best of Show

On Friday, October 3, Rizco Design became a part of history at The Jersey Shore Public Relations and Advertising Association’s (JSPRAA) 34th Annual JASPER Awards Dinner which was held at the PNC Bank Arts Center in Holmdel, NJ. For the first time in JASPER history there was a three-way tie for the Helen Hoffman Best of Show Award, which honors the entry with the highest overall score. Rizco Design took home two out of the three of the awards, for its Capital Printing Corporate Brochure and its Beleaf Public Relations Campaign.

Read more about the JASPER Awards.

Beleaf Introduces a New Website!

Check out the new site and learn more about Beleaf and its educational initiative.
Log onto beleaf.com to learn more.

Rizco Design is featured in Graphic Design USA

October 2008, Going Green issue.
Rizco Design speaks about how their green initiatives play a large role in their business goals.

Read all about it.

Project Give Back

A funding opportunity for 2009.

It is our belief that one small change can make a big difference in bettering the future of this world. Rizco Design is making one change today by aligning itself with a non-for-profit who is ready to implement their own “change” today to better an individual’s tomorrow.

Rizco Design introduces Project Give Back, a new initiative that will reward one lucky non-for-profit that has limited funding with volunteered design and branding experience for a project that will start and commence in the fiscal year of 2009.

Precise Continental – Eco-Engraver Selected For Obama Inaugural Invitations

Rizco Design is thrilled to learn that Precise Continental, our preferred eco-engraver, is engraving 1 million invitations for President-elect Barack Obama’s Inauguration! Congratulations!

By CAROLINE H. DWORIN
Published: December 19, 2008

On Thursday, Dec. 11, Jim Donnelly got the call at his office on Jay Street in Dumbo for the biggest job he had ever had. Emmett Beliveau, the executive director of the Presidential Inaugural Committee, told him that Precise Continental, Mr. Donnelly’s 26-year-old printing company, had won the bid to produce one million gold-and-black engraved invitations for the inauguration of President-elect Barack Obama.
Mr. Donnelly put out dozens of calls for rush orders of paper, ink and the like.

Mr. Donnelly gathered his staff for the announcement, and a cheer went up. “They were ecstatic,” he said. “They wanted to be a part of history.”

To meet the Jan. 2 deadline, Mr. Donnelly’s 65 employees have to work around the clock. But no one was complaining, Mr. Donnelly said, and he put out dozens of calls for rush orders of paper, ink and the like.

According to Mr. Donnelly, Precise Continental was selected over rival printers because it is a union company, it uses recycled paper and it is certified by the Forest Stewardship Council, which promotes responsible forest management. Although Clark Stevens, a spokesman for the inaugural committee, would not confirm that those factors were decisive, he did say, “These are issues that President-elect Obama campaigned on and that have concerned him throughout his career.”

Several days after the phone call, the snow fell heavily on the cobblestones in Dumbo, and trains rattled over the Manhattan Bridge. Inside Precise Continental, there was an almost poetic combination of mechanical repetition and human industry, all on an enormous ink-stained wooden floor. It could have been the 1800s.

The first order arrived by truck on Monday, from Neenah Paper, a Wisconsin company. Ink came on Tuesday from BuzzInk, in Chicago.

With clean hands, the workers inspected each invitation at each step in the process, and fed great machines moving back and forth. “This gentleman here can feed by hand as good as the automatic press can,” said Mr. Donnelly of a man he called Bobby, who was seated in front of a massive instrument moving sheets of paper from his left hand to his right.

Inspect_R

Precise Continental prints stationery and specialty items, like certificates for Fordham’s million-dollar donors and invitations to an Emmy after-party sponsored by TV Guide. As for the inaugural invitations, they are being printed on recycled paper called Classic Crest (“It’s a distinguished cream color,” said Bernie Hennessy, area sales director at Neenah Paper), with an inaugural seal at the top in gold. The curling black script, modified versions of Shelley Allegro and Kuenstler typefaces, begins, “The Presidential Inaugural Committee requests the honor of your presence. …”

Mr. Donnelly’s plant will hum 20 hours a day, with the workers in two shifts, to complete the project. “Our goal is to get as much done before Christmas Eve,” Mr. Donnelly said, “so they don’t have to work the day after Christmas.” He would not say how much the invitation project will cost.

A small, dark-haired, steady-handed man named Augusto Lovato, who speaks more Spanish than English, hunched over a drawing board in a quieter room off the main floor, a dusty lamp nearby. Peering though an old magnifying glass at a copper plate, he expertly cleaned the serifs and curls.

Click below for the full article:

http://www.precisedtk.com/2008/12/22/ny-times-inside-a-gritty-brooklyn-factory/

Clothing Recycling that Gives Back

According to the Council for Textile Recycling, more than 8.75 billion pounds of clothing ends up in landfills each year. That’s 10 pounds for every person in the U.S. Even though Americans are increasingly aware of how individual actions can impact our environment, only 15% of used clothes get recycled.

Clothing recycling is one of the most efficient recycling industries.
Nearly 100% of used textiles are recyclable!
• Almost 50% of textile waste is recovered as secondhand clothing.
• 20% of the material processed becomes wiping and polishing cloths.
• 26% is converted into fiber for products like mattresses and couches*.

CARECYCLE Inc., has “Give for the Greater Green” programs, which accept clean, gently worn clothing, shoes and sneakers to support sustainable living and benefit the environment. How does it work? CARECYCLE pays you to lease space for attractive, 6′ x 6′ x 6′ collection bins that are meticulously maintained weekly.

For more info and to download a “Clothing Recycling Opportunities Kit” visit carecycleinc.com.

Kean University Students Visit Rizco Design

Senior, Erin Hogan, and junior, Mike Ewanyk, spent three hours  onsite with Rizco Design’s team members to fulfill a “shadowing” assignment for their Survey of Graphic Design class. The course gives students a good idea of the life and career choices within the graphic design and advertising industry. The Rizco Design team was excited to share their process, review current projects, provide the thinking behind our design directions and answer questions about design, print production and preparing for the real world!