The Naming Fog · and Why It Exists
Walk into any paper merchant in Mumbai, Delhi, or Ahmedabad and ask for "a nice premium paper." You will be shown swatchbooks with names like Curious Collection, Colorplan, Sirio Color, Conqueror, Gmund Cotton, Crush, Materica, and Keaykolour. Each has a distinctive name, a beautiful swatchbook, and a price that reflects the premium brand positioning.
What you are rarely told is that nearly all of these fall into just eight or nine underlying generic paper categories. The name is the merchant's asset. The category is the material reality. A designer who specifies "Curious Metallics" is specifying a pearlescent coated paper. A buyer who asks for "Conqueror Laid" is asking for a laid-finish cotton-blend uncoated paper. A packaging manager specifying "Crush" is specifying an agrifibre recycled paper.
This is not fraud. Mills invest heavily in product development and brand building. But the fog of proprietary names has created a situation where:
- Designers specify by brand name without knowing the underlying material
- Buyers cannot compare prices between equivalent papers from different mills
- Press rooms receive files specifying unavailable papers with no generic fallback
- When a mill closes or discontinues a product, buyers are lost
Arjowiggins, the mill that made Curious Metallics, Conqueror, and Keaykolour, went into final liquidation in 2023. Thousands of Indian designers who had been specifying "Curious Metallics" for years suddenly had a problem. Those who understood it was simply a pearlescent coated paper found replacements immediately (Sirio Pearl from Fedrigoni, Galerie Metallique from Sappi). Those who only knew the brand name were lost. Knowing the generic category is the insurance policy against proprietary disruption.
The 12 Generic Categories
Every paper used in commercial print and packaging in India falls into one of these twelve categories. This is the complete map.
What it actually is
Coated paper is paper that has been given a mineral coating, typically a blend of calcium carbonate (chalk) and kaolin (china clay), on one or both sides after the base sheet is formed. The coating fills in the surface irregularities of the paper fibres, creating a smooth, non-absorbent surface that holds ink on the surface rather than letting it sink in.
This matters enormously for print quality. When ink is absorbed into uncoated paper, the halftone dots spread and lose sharpness. On coated paper the ink sits on the surface, dots stay crisp, and colour reproduction is significantly more accurate. A 175 LPI halftone that looks photographic on coated paper would look muddy on uncoated stock.
The sub-types
| Sub-type | Surface | Gloss (60°) | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gloss coated | Smooth, high reflectance | 65–85 GU | Photography, brochures, packaging with strong colour |
| Matte coated | Smooth but non-reflective | 8–25 GU | Annual reports, luxury brochures, editorial |
| Silk / Satin coated | Between gloss and matte | 35–55 GU | General commercial print, versatile |
| Cast coated | Mirror-finish, very high gloss | 85–95 GU | Premium labels, cosmetics packaging, gift wrap |
| Double coated | Two coating layers, maximum smoothness | 70–90 GU | High-end catalogues, coffee table books |
Indian market names for coated paper
In India, coated paper is commonly sold under these generic names. They are all the same category, differentiated only by GSM, finish, and coating weight:
Coated paper is the dominant substrate for commercial offset printing in India, brochures, catalogues, packaging inserts, annual reports, product packaging cartons. The most common specifications in Indian commercial print are 90 GSM, 115 GSM, 130 GSM, and 170 GSM gloss coated art paper. Art Card (coated paper above 200 GSM, typically 250–350 GSM) is used for covers, business cards, and folding cartons where a premium feel is required without full board weight. Domestically produced by ITC PSPD, JK Paper, and West Coast Paper Mills. Imported grades (Sappi, UPM, Stora Enso) are used for very high-quality work.
How to specify correctly
Do not specify by brand name. Specify: GSM + finish + coating weight + certification if required. Example: "130 GSM gloss coated art paper, minimum 10 gsm coating each side, FSC Mix certified." This allows any qualified supplier to provide an equivalent without dependency on a specific mill's product.
What it actually is
Uncoated paper has no mineral coating. The surface is the paper itself, cellulose fibres with their natural irregularities. Ink absorbs into the surface rather than sitting on top of it. This produces more dot gain (halftone dots spread and appear larger than specified) and lower colour saturation than coated paper, but also a more natural, tactile quality that many designers and readers prefer for long-form reading.
Uncoated paper is higher in bulk (thicker at the same weight) than coated paper. A 100 GSM uncoated sheet is noticeably thicker and stiffer than a 100 GSM coated sheet. This makes uncoated paper attractive for books, catalogues, and any application where physical presence matters.
The two fundamental types
Woodfree uncoated (WFU): Made entirely from chemically processed (chemical pulp) wood fibre with all lignin removed. White, stable, does not yellow significantly with age. The standard for office paper, stationery, books, and quality uncoated printing.
Mechanical / groundwood uncoated: Contains mechanical pulp which retains lignin. Lower quality, lower cost, yellows rapidly on exposure to light and oxygen. Newsprint is the primary example. Not suitable for archival printing.
Surface finishes in uncoated paper
| Finish | How created | Appearance | Common uses |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wove | Standard wire mesh, no visible pattern | Smooth, uniform | Standard office paper, most books |
| Laid | Dandy roll with parallel wire pattern | Parallel lines visible when held to light | Premium stationery, certificates, legal documents |
| Linen | Embossed after manufacture | Woven fabric texture | Premium stationery, invitations |
| Felt/Hammer | Felt-covered press rolls or embossing | Irregular, organic surface | Luxury stationery, fine art printing |
| Cockle/Vellum | Air-dried (not tension-dried) | Irregular puckered surface | Antique/heritage aesthetic, certificates |
Uncoated paper dominates India's enormous book printing market, educational textbooks (NCERT, state board), trade books, religious books (Quran, Gita, Bible printing, India is one of the world's largest producers of religious texts), notebooks, and stationery. Standard specifications: 60 GSM, 70 GSM, and 80 GSM woodfree for books; 90 GSM and 100 GSM for letterheads; 120–160 GSM cartridge for drawing and sketching. Produced domestically by virtually all major Indian mills including Satia Industries, Star Paper Mills, Naini Papers, and Orient Paper.
What it actually is
Coloured paper is uncoated paper where pigment or dye has been added during manufacture, either to the pulp itself (pulp-coloured, the premium method) or applied to the surface of the finished sheet (surface-dyed, the economy method). The critical difference between these two methods is visible at the cut edge: pulp-coloured paper shows the same colour through the entire cross-section of the sheet. Surface-dyed paper shows a white core at the cut edge.
This distinction matters for die-cut work, embossing, folding cartons, and any application where the cut edge or scored surface is visible in the finished piece. For premium stationery, invitations, and packaging, pulp-coloured is always the correct specification.
The reveal · what famous brand names actually are
These are all just coloured uncoated paper
How to print on coloured paper correctly
Coloured paper is not white. Every CMYK ink you print on it is modified by the paper's base colour. A yellow that reads correctly on white coated paper will look completely different on deep blue Colorplan. There is no automated correction for this, it requires intentional design and, for critical colour work, physical proofing on the actual substrate before committing to the production run.
Key rules: avoid printing photographs on deeply saturated coloured papers. Simple graphic design with flat colours works best. Embossing, foil stamping, and letterpress (which add texture without ink) are the most reliable print techniques for deeply coloured stocks.
Coloured specialty papers are imported into India primarily by luxury paper merchants in Mumbai and Delhi. They are predominantly used for premium invitations, wedding stationery, corporate gifts, luxury packaging inserts, and premium stationery. Domestic coloured paper production is limited, most Indian mills produce only white or off-white papers. The import price premium for papers like Colorplan and Sirio Color is significant (often 5–8× the price of domestic coated art paper), which is why specifying by generic category rather than brand name opens up alternative sourcing options.
What it actually is
Textured paper is uncoated paper with a surface pattern applied either during manufacture (by a patterned dandy roll on the paper machine, this produces laid, wove, and some linen patterns) or by embossing rollers after manufacture (which can create any pattern, linen, leather, stipple, pebble, and dozens of others). The texture is physical, it can be felt with the fingertip and creates depth when examined at a low angle.
Texture serves both aesthetic and functional purposes. Aesthetically, it signals quality, tradition, and physicality, the antithesis of the flat, digital world. Functionally, textured surfaces take foil stamping and blind embossing exceptionally well because the die's impression is emphasised against the textured background.
The reveal · what famous textured brand names actually are
These are all just textured uncoated papers
Textured papers are heavily used in India's premium wedding stationery market, the combination of laid or linen texture with hot foil stamping and letterpress is the signature aesthetic of high-end Indian wedding invitations. Also used for luxury letterheads, certificates, annual reports where a premium uncoated feel is required, and bespoke corporate stationery. All imported, no significant domestic production of textured specialty papers in India. The Indian handmade paper tradition (see Category 11) produces naturally textured surfaces that are increasingly used as local alternatives.
What it actually is
Metallic and pearlescent papers are papers coated with metallic pigments, typically aluminium flakes (for silver/metallic effects) or mica particles coated with titanium dioxide or iron oxide (for pearlescent/iridescent effects). The coating creates a surface that reflects light directionally, producing shimmer, iridescence, or a near-mirror appearance depending on the grade.
There are three distinct levels of metallic effect, from softest to most intense:
- Pearlescent / Pearl: Soft, diffuse shimmer. Iridescent, the colour shifts with viewing angle. The most common and versatile metallic paper type.
- Metallic: Stronger, more directional reflectance. Gold, silver, copper, and bronze effects. More obviously "metallic" than pearlescent.
- Mirror / High-gloss metallic: Near-mirror reflectance. Very high gloss. Primarily used for premium labels and luxury packaging.
The reveal · what famous metallic brand names actually are
These are all just metallic / pearlescent coated papers
Printing on metallic paper · what actually works
Metallic papers are challenging to print on. The metallic surface has very low ink absorption. CMYK process colours will look washed out unless you use UV inks or allow extended drying time. The metallic surface shows fingerprints immediately after printing and before lamination. Key rules:
- UV offset or UV inkjet gives the best colour density on metallic papers
- Limit total ink coverage to 250% maximum, the non-absorbent surface cannot carry heavy ink loads
- Lamination after printing protects against fingerprints and scuffing
- Barcodes on metallic backgrounds frequently fail scanner verification, always test
- Embossing and foil stamping on metallic paper produce stunning results, the contrast between the metallic base and an embossed or foiled element is particularly effective
Metallic and pearlescent papers are used in India primarily for luxury packaging (premium cosmetics, perfume boxes, gift packaging), premium stationery and wedding invitations, greeting cards, and high-end certificates and awards. Entirely imported, no domestic Indian production of metallic specialty papers. Available through specialty paper importers in Mumbai and Delhi. The price premium over standard coated paper is typically 6–12×, which makes correct specification critical, ordering Sirio Pearl when you mean Curious Metallics (or vice versa) leads to significant cost differences despite both being "pearlescent paper."
What it actually is
This category covers papers made from post-consumer recycled fibre (PCW, paper that has been used, collected, and reprocessed) or from agricultural fibres and waste materials as a substitute for or supplement to wood pulp. Both types produce papers with a distinctive warm, natural appearance, typically off-white or cream in colour, often with visible natural flecks, with a tactile surface that signals environmental responsibility.
It is important to understand the difference between the main types, because they have very different properties and applications:
| Type | Raw material | Appearance | Strength |
|---|---|---|---|
| 100% PCW recycled | Post-consumer waste paper | Off-white, may have slight grey tone | Slightly lower than virgin |
| Mixed recycled + virgin | Part recycled, part virgin wood pulp | Near-white | Good |
| Agrifibre (sugarcane bagasse) | Sugarcane waste after juice extraction | Warm off-white, natural flecks | Good |
| Agrifibre (wheat straw) | Wheat straw agricultural residue | Warm off-white | Moderate |
| Agrifibre (cotton/rag) | Cotton textile waste | White, premium quality | Very high |
| Exotic agrifibre (Crush) | Citrus peel, kiwi, lavender, olive, coffee | Warm tones, visible inclusions | Moderate |
The reveal · what famous ecological brand names actually are
These are all just recycled or agrifibre papers
India has a natural advantage in agrifibre paper production. Sugarcane bagasse is abundant as a by-product of India's enormous sugar industry. TNPL (Tamil Nadu Newsprint and Papers Ltd) pioneered bagasse-based paper production in India and produces writing, printing, and newsprint grades from sugarcane waste. Pakka Ltd produces food-grade packaging from sugarcane bagasse. This is genuinely circular industrial practice, the paper industry uses what the sugar industry discards. For print buyers specifying ecological papers, a domestically produced bagasse-based paper from TNPL or Pakka often provides the same environmental story as imported Crush at a fraction of the cost.
What it actually is
Cotton paper is made from cotton linters (the short fibres remaining after cotton has been processed for textiles) or from cotton rag (recycled cotton textile waste), rather than from wood pulp. Cotton fibre is longer and stronger than wood fibre, and contains no lignin, the compound in wood that causes paper to yellow and become brittle over time. This gives cotton paper exceptional permanence, strength, and a distinctive feel.
Cotton paper is significantly more expensive than wood-pulp paper. A 300 GSM 100% cotton sheet may cost 8–12× more than an equivalent coated art paper. The premium is justified where permanence, an unmistakeable tactile quality, or the ability to withstand repeated handling (currency) is required.
Key properties of cotton paper
| Property | Cotton paper | Woodfree uncoated |
|---|---|---|
| Fibre length | Long (10–40mm) | Short (1–3mm) |
| Lignin content | Zero | Low (chemical pulp) |
| Yellowing over time | Minimal, centuries of permanence | Moderate over decades |
| Tear strength | Very high | Moderate |
| Feel | Soft, almost fabric-like | Paper-like |
| Water resistance | High, does not disintegrate when wet | Low, tears easily when wet |
| Print suitability | Excellent for letterpress, engraving, offset | Good for offset |
The reveal · what famous cotton brand names actually are
These are all just cotton fibre papers
India has a centuries-old tradition of cotton paper making. Sanganer in Rajasthan and parts of Gujarat still produce handmade cotton rag paper using traditional methods. Indian cotton paper is used for legal documents, certificates, currency (Security Paper Mill, Hoshangabad produces India's banknote paper), and increasingly for premium stationery and art printing. For buyers who want the properties of cotton paper without the import price premium of Gmund Cotton or Crane's Lettra, Indian handmade cotton papers from Rajasthan producers offer a genuine domestic alternative with a strong provenance story.
What it actually is
Synthetic paper is not paper in the traditional sense. It contains no cellulose fibre from wood or cotton. Instead, it is a plastic film, manufactured from polypropylene, polyethylene, or a calcium carbonate/HDPE composite, that has been surface-treated to accept printing inks. The result is a material that looks and feels similar to paper but has fundamentally different properties: it is completely waterproof, highly tear-resistant, and dimensionally stable across humidity changes.
The main types
| Type | Base material | Key brand | Properties |
|---|---|---|---|
| BOPP synthetic paper | Biaxially oriented polypropylene | Yupo (Japan) | Waterproof, tearproof, recyclable, excellent printability |
| Stone paper | Calcium carbonate + HDPE (10%) | Stone Paper, RPD | No water, no trees, waterproof, smooth surface |
| Polyethylene paper | Polyethylene film | Teslin (PPG) | Extremely durable, used for ID cards and high-security documents |
| PET synthetic paper | Polyethylene terephthalate | Synaps (Agfa), Polyart | Very high tear and temperature resistance |
When to use synthetic paper
Synthetic paper is not a premium upgrade from regular paper, it is a functional specification for environments where paper would fail. Common applications:
- Restaurant menus and outdoor signage (waterproof, can be wiped clean)
- Pharmaceutical labels (chemical resistance, moisture resistance)
- Outdoor self-adhesive labels on bottles, drums, and containers exposed to moisture
- Maps and navigation materials
- Wristbands and event passes
- Security documents and ID cards (Teslin)
- Instructional tags on products exposed to the elements
Synthetic papers require specific inks. Standard offset inks will not adhere reliably to BOPP or stone paper surfaces without surface treatment. UV-curable inks are the most reliable option for synthetic papers in offset printing. Inkjet printing requires specially formulated inks. Always specify the substrate to your ink supplier and request a signed adhesion test confirmation before production.
Stone paper production has grown in India, it is positioned as a tree-free, water-free alternative to conventional paper and appeals to brands with sustainability commitments. BOPP synthetic paper (Yupo and equivalents) is used in India for pharmaceutical labels, water-resistant product labels, and outdoor applications. Teslin is used for identity documents and some security applications. All synthetic papers in India are imported, no domestic synthetic paper manufacturing at significant scale.
What it actually is
Specialty coated papers carry a functional or sensory coating that goes beyond the standard gloss/matte/silk range. The base is typically a standard coated or uncoated paper, but the surface treatment gives it a specific tactile, optical, or functional property. These papers blur the line between paper substrate and finishing technique, in some cases the "paper" is really a standard coated sheet with a post-manufacturing surface treatment applied.
| Type | What the coating does | Applications |
|---|---|---|
| Soft touch / velvet | Micro-textured polymer coating that creates a velvety tactile feel. Very low gloss (5–12 GU). Similar to soft touch lamination but applied at the paper level. | Luxury packaging, premium stationery, book covers |
| Suede / felt | Similar to soft touch but coarser texture, more aggressive tactile feel | Premium cosmetics packaging, luxury goods |
| Scented / fragrance | Microencapsulated fragrance embedded in the coating, released by touch or scratching | Perfume packaging, cosmetics, food packaging |
| Thermochromic | Colour-changing coating activated by temperature, typically cold to warm or warm to cold | Cold chain verification, novelty packaging, security |
| Dry-erase / whiteboard | Extremely smooth, non-porous coating that accepts and releases dry-erase markers | Office products, calendars, planning sheets |
| Anti-static | Conductive coating that dissipates electrostatic charge | Electronics component packaging, cleanroom applications |
| Barrier coated | Grease, moisture, or oxygen barrier coating applied to paper | Food packaging, replacing plastic films in sustainable packaging |
Barrier-coated papers are the fastest-growing sub-category in India, driven by EPR (Extended Producer Responsibility) legislation pushing brands to replace non-recyclable multi-layer plastic packaging with paper-based alternatives. Pakka Ltd is the most prominent Indian producer of grease-barrier and moisture-barrier papers for food packaging. ITC PSPD's Filo series is a barrier-coated paperboard for food packaging. This is an area where India is developing genuine domestic capability, watch this space for new product introductions from Indian mills over the next 3–5 years.
What it actually is
NCR stands for No Carbon Required. Carbonless paper is a multi-layer paper system that creates duplicate copies when written on or impacted, without the messy carbon paper intermediate layer used in older copy systems. It is the most widely used specialty paper in India, the humble duplicate invoice book, delivery challan, receipt book, and order form that is the operational backbone of virtually every Indian business are all printed on NCR paper.
How carbonless paper works
NCR paper uses two different coatings on different layers:
- CB coating (Coated Back): Applied to the back of the top sheet. Contains microcapsules of colourless dye. When pressure is applied (writing, typing, printing), the capsules rupture and release the dye.
- CF coating (Coated Front): Applied to the front of the receiving sheet. Contains a reactive clay that turns dark when the dye contacts it, forming a visible mark.
- CFB coating (Coated Front and Back): Applied to middle sheets in 3-part or 4-part sets, they receive the impression from above and pass it to the sheet below.
NCR sets · the standard colour sequence in India
| Part | Standard colour | Coating | Goes to |
|---|---|---|---|
| Top copy (original) | White | CB | Customer / recipient |
| 2nd copy | Yellow | CFB | File / accounts |
| 3rd copy | Pink | CFB or CF | Driver / store / dispatch |
| 4th copy | Goldenrod / buff | CF | Office file / management |
NCR paper consumption in India is enormous but invisible because it is almost never discussed as a specialty paper. Every kirana store invoice book, every transport challan, every restaurant KOT (Kitchen Order Ticket), every workshop job card, every school fee receipt, the vast majority are printed on NCR sets. India's NCR paper production is predominantly from small and medium mills using imported chemical coatings. ITC PSPD produces specialty NCR grades commercially. The trend toward digital billing is reducing NCR consumption in urban organised retail but the unorganised sector, which is the vast majority of Indian business by volume, continues to depend on paper-based NCR systems and will do so for decades.
What it actually is
Handmade paper is produced one sheet at a time using traditional papermaking techniques, a suspended fibre mixture (the "furnish") is scooped onto a flat mesh screen (the mould), drained, pressed, and air-dried. No paper machine is used. The result is a sheet with natural deckle edges, natural texture variation, and embedded character that no machine-made paper can reproduce. Each sheet is individually unique.
India has one of the world's richest handmade paper traditions, dating back centuries. The craft survives most strongly in Sanganer (Rajasthan), a village that has produced handmade paper for 500+ years and today supplies premium stationery, wedding invitations, and art paper to buyers across India and internationally.
Indian handmade paper varieties
| Type | Fibre source | Origin | Properties and uses |
|---|---|---|---|
| Khadi paper | Cotton rag / cotton linter | Sanganer, Gujarat, across India | Soft, warm white, excellent for printing, painting, and letterpress. India's most common handmade paper. |
| Banana fibre paper | Banana plant stem (pseudostem) | Kerala, Tamil Nadu | Strong natural texture, warm buff colour, sustainable agricultural byproduct. Used for stationery and packaging. |
| Lokta paper | Lokta bush (Daphne cannabina) | Nepal Himalayas, northern India | Very long fibres, extremely strong, translucent. Traditional Himalayan manuscript paper. Used for wrapping, bags, premium stationery. |
| Mulberry paper | Mulberry tree bark | Northeast India, Myanmar border regions | Long fibres, translucent, elegant texture. Used for lampshades, art printing, specialty packaging. |
| Marbled paper | Cotton base with marbled ink surface | Sanganer, Jaipur | |
| Recycled handmade | Post-consumer waste paper + natural additions | Various India centres | Often includes flower petals, leaves, or grasses embedded in the sheet. Popular for eco-packaging and stationery. |
Sanganer, 16 km south of Jaipur, is India's handmade paper capital. The village has approximately 600 paper-making units employing several thousand artisans. Production methods are unchanged from the Mughal period, cotton rags are soaked, beaten to a pulp, scooped onto bamboo or wire moulds, pressed between felt sheets, and sun-dried on the rooftops. Sanganer paper reaches buyers in Japan, Germany, the UK, and the US as premium art and stationery paper. For Indian print buyers seeking a premium, locally produced alternative to imported specialty papers with an authentic sustainability story, Sanganer handmade paper offers something that no European mill can match: a living craft tradition of five centuries.
What it actually is
Board is paper above approximately 200 GSM that has sufficient stiffness for structural applications, folding cartons, book covers, mounting, and packaging. Board is typically multi-layer (several layers of fibre bonded together during manufacture) rather than a single sheet, giving it stiffness that single-sheet paper cannot achieve at the same caliper.
Board grades are covered in depth in the Paper & Board Grades article. A brief summary of the main types:
| Grade | Construction | Surface quality | India applications |
|---|---|---|---|
| SBS, Solid Bleached Sulphate | 100% bleached chemical pulp, all layers | Excellent, bright white both sides | Pharmaceutical cartons, premium FMCG, food-grade packaging |
| FBB, Folding Box Board | White outer layers + mechanical pulp middle | Excellent front, good back | Premium FMCG, cosmetics, confectionery |
| Duplex board | White coated front, grey recycled back | Good front, grey back | Economy FMCG, dairy, commodity packaging |
| Kraft board | Unbleached chemical pulp, brown colour | Natural brown, can be printed | Carrier bags, corrugated medium, eco-packaging |
| Greyboard / chipboard | 100% recycled fibre, grey throughout | Grey, uncoated | Book covers, binders, puzzle boards, mounting |
For full specifications, caliper-GSM relationships, crease rule calculations, and SBS vs FBB comparison, see Paper & Board Grades and Folding Cartons.
How to Specify Paper Without Using Brand Names
The goal of knowing generic categories is to be able to specify paper in a way that is mill-neutral, that can be sourced from multiple suppliers and does not create dependency on a single brand or mill. Here is the framework:
The correct specification format
A complete paper specification contains six elements:
- Generic category, e.g. "Gloss coated art paper" not "Galerie Art"
- GSM, e.g. "130 GSM"
- Finish (if applicable), e.g. "gloss" / "matte" / "laid"
- Colour (if applicable), e.g. "white" / "natural" / if coloured: specify as close to Pantone as possible
- Certification (if required), e.g. "FSC Mix required" / "PEFC certified"
- Reference brand (optional, as a guide), e.g. "similar to Colorplan Ebony or equivalent", this helps the supplier understand the quality level without making it mandatory
Incorrect: "Curious Metallics, Ice Gold, 120 GSM", mill closed, product discontinued, no fallback specified.
Correct: "120 GSM pearlescent coated paper, pearl/iridescent effect, white base with gold-green interference shimmer, FSC Mix preferred. Reference: Sirio Pearl Ice White (Fedrigoni) or equivalent pearlescent grade."
The second specification can be sourced from any competent specialty paper supplier globally. The first is a dead end.
The master demystification map
Use this reference whenever a designer or buyer specifies a proprietary paper name, it tells you the generic category and the correct replacement specification:
Proprietary name → Generic category → Current equivalent
Paper & Board Grades, SBS, FBB, Duplex, Kraft in depth · GSM Explained, paper weight reference · Coatings & Surfaces, gloss, matte, silk coating technology · Folding Cartons, how board grades are used in packaging