Navy Blue Wire-O Binding Supplies

Navy Blue Wire-O Binding Supplies provide a classic, professional finish with lasting durability. Made from strong double-loop metal wire, Wire-O binding keeps pages secure, allows smooth turning, and enables documents to lay flat. The deep navy blue finish adds a distinguished touch, making it ideal for reports, manuals, proposals, and presentations in offices, schools, and print shops.

Navy Blue Wire-O Binding Supplies

Navy Blue Wire-O Binding Supplies provide a classic, professional finish with lasting durability. Made from strong double-loop metal wire, Wire-O binding keeps pages secure, allows smooth turning, and enables documents to lay flat. The deep...

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MyBinding

features

  • Elegant navy blue finish adds a professional touch to your documents.
  • 3:1 pitch design ensures a secure and durable binding for long-lasting use.
  • Accommodates a wide range of document sizes, holding 5 to 110 sheets of 20lb bond paper.
  • Compatible with all standard 3:1 wire binding machines for effortless binding.
Starting at $18.33
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MyBinding

features

  • Elegant navy blue finish adds a professional touch to your documents.
  • Durable 2:1 pitch design ensures secure binding for long-lasting use.
  • Versatile sizes accommodate a wide range of sheet capacities, from 20 to 310 sheets.
  • Compatible with standard 2:1 wire binding machines for easy and efficient binding.
Starting at $25.33
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Frequently Asked Questions

Yes, color has no effect on wire performance, sheet capacity, or how securely the binding holds — a navy 1-1/4" 2:1 pitch wire holds up to roughly 310 sheets just as reliably as the same diameter in black or silver. The choice of navy is purely about matching a cover design, brand color, or department standard rather than a functional consideration. If you're binding a high-sheet-count manual, focus on selecting the correct diameter and pitch for your stack size first, then choose navy or any other available color without affecting the outcome.

Pitch has to match your punch pattern exactly — 3:1 pitch is generally used for thinner documents like standard reports, while 2:1 pitch accommodates thicker documents since the wider loop spacing allows for larger wire diameters. A wire in the wrong pitch simply won't thread through the punched holes regardless of color. Punching a test sheet and counting the holes across the 11-inch edge confirms which pitch your machine produces before ordering navy wire in a specific pitch. Confirming the correct die is installed on your wire binding machine before punching a full run prevents wasting supplies on the wrong pitch.

Mixing navy wire with a different cover color is a common and practical choice — many offices use a neutral or contrasting wire color specifically so it doesn't compete visually with a colored or branded cover design. Matching wire to cover color works well for a fully coordinated, uniform look, but isn't required for the binding to function or look professional. The decision comes down to whether visual coordination matters for your specific document's presentation, not a technical requirement of the binding system itself.

Availability can vary by specific diameter and pitch combination, since less commonly ordered sizes sometimes have more limited supply than standard mid-range diameters. If you're planning a large order in a less common size, checking current availability before finalizing your document design and print run helps avoid a delay waiting on a specific diameter. For the full color and size range if your exact needed diameter isn't available in navy, Wire-O binding supplies cover the complete pitch and diameter selection across all available colors.