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Paper Handling Equipment Comparison 5
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General Binding 40
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Roll Lamination, Laminating 1
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Plastic Comb Binding 12
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Zipbind 2
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Whiteboards 5
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View Binders 1
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VeloBind 4
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Twin Loop Wire 12
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Thermal Binding 8
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SureBind 4
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Strip Binding 1
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Staplers 3
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Stack Cutters 1
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Specialty Binders 2
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Screw Post 2
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School Laminator 1
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Rotary Trimmer 3
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Roll Lamination 10
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Rhin-O-Tuff 7
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Reinforced Paper 1
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Proclick Binding, Zipbind 1
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Proclick Binding 9
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Pre-Printed Index Tabs 1
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Pouch Lamination 14
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Pouch Board Laminator 1
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Pocket Folders 1
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Personal Shredders 1
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Perforated Paper 2
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Perfect Binding 1
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Paper Scoring 2
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Paper Joggers 2
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Paper Folders 9
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Paper Drill 2
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Paper 2
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Multimedia Shredders 1
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Modular Punching 8
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Lanyards 8
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Laminators Comparison 1
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Industrial Shredders 1
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Index Tab Dividers 2
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Hole Punches 2
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High Security Shredders 1
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Health Care Punched Paper 1
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Guillotine Cutters 4
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General Shredding 34
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General Laminating 19
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Foil Laminating 1
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Fastback Binding 25
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Electronic Paper Cutters 1
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Custom Index Tabs 1
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Cross-Cut Shredders 2
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Corner Rounders 2
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Copier Tabs 4
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Coil Binding 20
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Chalkboards 1
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Cardboard Shredders 1
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Bulletin Boards 3
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Booklet Makers 3
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Binding Machines Comparison 8
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Binding Covers 14
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Binding , Rhin-O-Tuff 1
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Binding , Perfect Binding 4
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Binding , Coil Binding 2
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Badge Reels 1
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Badge Holder 1
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Plastic Comb Binding 3
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ID Accessories 2
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Paper Handling 3
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Index Tabs 2
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Ring Binders 2
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Paper Shredders 2
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Boards 2
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Binding 5
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Laminating 9
What supplies should I have with my laminator?

A laminator performs the core laminating function, but a fully equipped laminating station requires several supporting supplies that prevent jams, extend machine life, improve quality, and expand what you can produce. This guide covers every supply worth having at your laminating station and why each one matters.
What Supplies Should I Have with My Laminator?
Essential laminating supplies fall into four categories: consumables (pouches used on every job), protective supplies (carriers and cleaning tools protecting the machine), finishing supplies (trimmers and corner rounders that complete the professional result), and specialty supplies that expand production capability. Building a complete inventory across all four ensures your station handles any job without supply interruptions. See What Are Some Options for Trimming My Laminated Documents? for full trimming tool guidance.
Essential Laminating Supplies - Complete List
1. Laminating Pouches in Multiple Sizes and Thicknesses
Laminating pouches are the primary consumable. Stock at least two pouch sizes covering your most common document types (typically letter and ID card or badge size) and at least two thicknesses (5 mil for general use and 10 mil for ID badges). Running out of the correct pouch size mid-job is one of the most avoidable production interruptions in any laminating environment.
2. Laminating Carrier

A laminating carrier (also called a carrier sheet or laminating folder) is a folded, silicone-coated sheet that holds a loaded pouch as it passes through the machine. The carrier protects the heated rollers from adhesive seepage, prevents thin pouches from wrapping around the rollers, and ensures the pouch feeds flat and square. Carriers are reusable for 100 to 200 laminating jobs before replacement. Every laminating station should have at least two on hand.
3. Laminator Cleaning Kit

A cleaning kit contains cleaning sheets, cleaning solution, and applicator cloths for removing adhesive buildup from the rollers. Laminating aids and accessories including cleaning kits are one of the most frequently forgotten supplies. Adhesive buildup on rollers is the primary cause of pouch jams and uneven lamination quality. Schedule roller cleaning monthly for regular use.
4. Trimmer

A paper trimmer is essential for cutting the excess laminate border from finished documents. A rotary trimmer in the 12-inch range handles standard document sizes cleanly and precisely. Position it within arm's reach of the laminator output so trimming flows seamlessly from the laminating step without moving to a different location.
5. Corner Rounder
A corner rounder removes sharp corners after straight-line trimming. Sharp laminate corners are the first points where edge peeling begins in frequently handled documents. A 1/4 inch radius corner rounder (the standard ID card corner specification) is the most versatile option.
6. ID Accessories and Attachment Hardware

For environments laminating ID badges and credentials, attachment hardware is an essential supply category. ID badge accessories include badge holders, lanyards, badge reels, clip-back pins, and slot punches for creating lanyard holes. Stock quantities matching badge production volume.
7. Specialty Pouches

Specialty laminating pouches expand the range of finished products beyond standard clear-film lamination. Options include matte-finish, UV-protective, magnetic-back, pre-printed border, and specialty foil pouches (gold, silver, holographic) for premium documents. Having a small stock of specialty options on hand allows these products to be produced on demand.
How to Stock a Complete Laminating Station - Step by Step
- Audit your most common laminating jobs. What document sizes? What thicknesses? What finishes? This drives core pouch inventory.
- Calculate weekly consumption. Order 4 to 6 weeks of supply for each type to buffer against shipping delays.
- Stock at least 2 carriers. Replace when visibly creased or when adhesive buildup is thick enough to transfer to documents.
- Add a cleaning kit to every laminator and schedule monthly roller cleaning.
- Position trimmer and corner rounder at the laminator output end so the workflow flows without interruption.
- Stock ID attachment hardware if badge or credential production occurs. Keep a minimum 1-month supply on hand.
Quick Reference - Laminating Station Supply Checklist
| Supply | Priority | Replace When | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Laminating pouches | Essential | Used up | Stock multiple sizes and thicknesses |
| Laminating carrier | Essential | Creased or adhesive transfer | Keep 2 on hand |
| Cleaning kit | High | Rollers show buildup | Clean monthly |
| Trimmer | High | Blade dulls | Rotary preferred for laminate |
| Corner rounder | Recommended | Punch dulls | 1/4 inch radius for ID cards |
| ID accessories | As needed | Used up | Match to badge production volume |
Building a Laminating Station on a Budget
A complete laminating station does not need to be assembled all at once. Prioritizing the supplies by impact makes the investment practical in stages. The first priority is always pouches and a carrier - these two items allow production to begin and protect the machine from the most common cause of early failure (adhesive roller contamination). The trimmer is the second priority, as it is the difference between rough output and professional finished documents.
The cleaning kit becomes important as soon as laminating volume reaches daily use. A machine used heavily every day builds adhesive deposits on the rollers within a few weeks. Addressing this before performance degrades means cleaning is a routine maintenance step rather than an emergency response to a jam or quality problem. A basic cleaning kit costs relatively little compared to the cost of machine repair or replacement that results from neglected roller maintenance.
Corner rounders and ID accessories are the third tier - important for specific production types (badge production, customer-facing cards) but not essential for general document laminating. Adding these supplies as the laminating operation grows into those specific applications is more economical than purchasing them speculatively before the need is established.
Supply organization at the laminating station has a direct impact on production speed. Supplies stored in labeled bins within arm reach of the machine eliminate the time lost searching for the right pouch size or retrieving the corner rounder from a different location. A simple pegboard or drawer unit positioned beside the laminator with dedicated spaces for each supply type reduces per-document time and makes it immediately visible when any supply is running low and needs reordering.
Troubleshooting
Laminated documents have surface marks and impressions
Rollers have adhesive buildup transferring to documents. Use a cleaning kit immediately. Run 2 to 3 carrier passes with blank paper after cleaning to confirm quality before laminating actual documents.
The carrier is sticking to the laminated document
The carrier is worn out and its silicone coating is degrading. Replace the carrier. Worn carriers can damage the lamination when the carrier is peeled open.
Running out of the right pouch size mid-job
Establish a minimum reorder quantity for each pouch type. When stock falls to that level, reorder immediately. A simple low-stock alert system prevents the supply stockout that disrupts production.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need all of these supplies for basic document laminating?
At minimum: pouches and a carrier. The carrier is the single most important accessory for machine protection. A trimmer is strongly recommended for any volume beyond a few documents per week.
How often should I clean my laminator rollers?
Once per month for regular daily use, or immediately after any incident where adhesive escaped the pouch and contacted the rollers.
What is the shelf life of laminating pouches?
Laminating pouches stored correctly (flat, cool, dry, sealed packaging away from UV light) last 2 to 5 years. Pouches stored in hot or humid conditions degrade faster.
Can I use a laminating carrier indefinitely?
No. The silicone coating degrades with repeated heat cycles. Replace when visibly creased, warped, or when adhesive transfer to documents begins. This typically occurs after 100 to 200 laminating jobs.
What is the difference between a cleaning sheet and a cleaning kit?
A cleaning sheet is a pre-coated sheet that removes surface adhesive when run through the warm machine. A cleaning kit adds cleaning solution and cloths for more thorough maintenance. Cleaning sheets alone are adequate for monthly maintenance; a full kit is needed after major adhesive jams.
One laminating station supply that is frequently underestimated is the quantity of ID accessories needed per production run. A typical 50-badge production run requires 50 badge holders plus the lanyards, badge reels, or clip-backs that each badge recipient uses to wear or display it. These attachment items are consumed in the same quantity as the laminated badges themselves, yet they are often ordered in smaller quantities or forgotten entirely in supply planning. Establishing a clear one-to-one relationship between badge pouches ordered and attachment hardware ordered prevents the common situation of finishing laminated badges with no way to distribute them.
Keeping copier tabs and standard index dividers stocked separately prevents the confusion that arises when both types are stored together. Copier tabs require the extra step of printing before assembly; standard pre-printed dividers are ready to use from the package. If both are stored in the same bin, staff may accidentally use copier tabs as if they were pre-labeled dividers, assembling binders with blank tabs that need to be relabeled manually. Clear labeling of both supply types, stored in separate locations with brief usage notes attached, prevents this error.
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