I never really cared about adding labels to my beers…until I did and that was awesome!
Creativity is endless and labels really add a personal touch to your beers
At first, I thought about making oval labels, but I quickly realized square/rectangle are more convenient, both to print and cut and in terms of available space
This is a template I created for Adobe Illustrator, it already includes a name, beer style and various information such as ingredients, street address and Best before date
Plain white paper from your printer gives a surprisingly smart result
Also experiment with Kraft paper, which is my favorite
Here are some examples
Make sure to use a laser printer and not an inkjet, so the ink won’t run when labels get wet in the cooler
If you add trim marks in Illustrator->Print->Marks and Bleed->Trim Marks and use a Paper Trimmer like this one you can make many labels in no time
The typical size is when the label covers about half of the circumference of the bottle, roughly 3.5″ x 3.5″ for 12oz bottles (9.5cm wide x 8.5cm high for European 33cl bottles)
You can fit up to 6 labels per page if you stick them together
If you want to add more text, you can make labels that wrap almost all around the bottles and have a vertical rectangle on one side for example, just leave about ½” (1 cm), so that both ends don’t overlap
You can remain quite traditional, with just the name of your beer, style, ingredients, ABV, content volume and so on, but it’s a lot more fun to really unleash your imagination and create funky designs, check this out
Really, the sky is the limit and you’ll be amazed how labels can enhance your beers
How to stick beer bottle labels
A long time brewer’s favorite, milk works perfectly and you always have some at hand
It sticks like hell when dry and it’s super easy to remove with some water
Make sure to use whole milk as skimmed milk won’t stick enough
For best results, you don’t need to soak labels in milk, just apply some on the back with a brush and you’ll be fine
To remove labels, just run them under water
More details in this excellent tutorial
If you get a little more serious and want to improvise a cheap label gluer, try this
Or more simply
Like your blog…
Keep it up.
Do you have any favorite Home brewing blogs you follow?
Hi!
Thanks for the feedback.
I don’t follow any homebrewing blog in particular, but I spend quite some time on homebrewtalk every time I’m not sure about something or if I want to ask a question.
I’ve been making labels for my brew for many years now.
I’ve always used a bubble jet printer. To overcome the ink running problem, I spray the printed sheets with a clear acrylic spray, allow to dry and then cut to the required size, QED.
Rob