Silver Spiral Binding Coils

Silver Spiral Binding Coils provide a sleek, modern finish with professional durability. Available in both flexible PVC and sturdy metal coil options, they ensure smooth 360 ° page turning and secure page binding. The metallic silver color adds a sophisticated, polished look that makes reports, manuals, and presentations stand out. Whether you choose the lightweight versatility of PVC or the long-lasting strength of metal, Silver Spiral Binding Coils are an excellent choice for schools, offices, and businesses seeking a contemporary, professional finish.

Silver Spiral Binding Coils

Silver Spiral Binding Coils provide a sleek, modern finish with professional durability. Available in both flexible PVC and sturdy metal coil options, they ensure smooth 360 ° page turning and secure page binding. The metallic...

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MyBinding

features

  • Elegant silver coils with a glossy pearl finish for a professional presentation.
  • Versatile diameter options from 6mm to 50mm, accommodating various document thicknesses.
  • Durable food-grade PVC construction ensures long-lasting use and reliability.
  • Compatible with all standard 4:1 pitch binding machines for seamless integration.
Starting at $9.09
SKU
PRODUCT NAME
PRICE
QUANTITY
MyBinding

features

  • High-quality food-grade PVC construction ensures durability and a professional appearance.
  • Versatile diameter options from 6mm to 50mm accommodate various document thicknesses.
  • Elegant glossy pearl finish enhances the visual appeal of your presentations and reports.
  • Available in a pack of 100, perfect for businesses and educators with high-volume binding needs.
Starting at $22.58
SKU
PRODUCT NAME
PRICE
QUANTITY
MyBinding

Item#: 9SPIRALCOIL

$35.69

features

  • Perfectly sized at 9.5" for seamless binding of half-size (8.5") documents.
  • 44-hole pattern ensures a secure and professional finish for all your projects.
  • Convenient pack of 100 coils, ideal for high-volume binding needs.
  • Available in a wide range of vibrant colors to match any project theme or branding.
$35.69
MyBinding

Item#: 18COIL

features

  • Length: 18"
  • Size: 18"
  • Hole Pattern: 44 Hole
  • Quantity: 100pk
$58.29
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MyBinding

Item#: 15SPIRAL

features

  • Length: 15"
  • Size: 15"
  • Hole Pattern: 44 Hole
  • Quantity: 100pk
$39.79
Choose Options
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MyBinding

Item#: SPCOIL321

$92.49

features

  • Length: 12" Letter (or choose other length)
  • Pitch: 0.313 (3.2 Holes Per Inch)
  • Hole Pattern: 44 Hole
  • Quantity: 100 Per Box
$92.49

Showing 6 of 6 products

Frequently Asked Questions

The most important thing to measure is the full thickness of the punched book, including covers, not just the number of sheets inside it. Two books with the same page count can still need different coil sizes if one uses heavier stock or thicker covers. Buyers should also think about how the finished book should feel when it opens and turns. A coil that is too tight can make page turning stiff and distort the bound edge, while one that is too loose can leave the book feeling sloppy. Taking the thickness from a sample stack is usually the safest way to narrow the size. If the project already uses a standard 4:1 hole pattern, the 4:1 Spiral Coil Binding Supplies section is a practical place to sort size options faster.

PVC usually makes more sense when buyers want the familiar movement and resilience of plastic coil binding while still getting a metallic-looking finish. Metal can suit projects where a different visual feel or a more rigid appearance matters more. The better choice depends on how the document will be used, stored, and handled over time. Manuals, menus, planners, and presentation books may each point in a different direction because appearance is only one part of the decision. Buyers should think about flexibility, turning feel, durability at the edge, and the impression the finished piece should give. Color alone does not decide the right material. The useful choice is the one that supports the book’s function while also giving the silver look that fits the project.

Pitch matters because the coil has to match the hole pattern made by the punch. If the pitch is wrong, the coil will not thread properly and the book will not bind correctly, no matter how good the color or diameter looks on paper. Buyers sometimes focus on finish and size first, but pitch is one of the main compatibility checks that should be made early. A silver coil is still the wrong coil if it does not line up with the punched holes. Using Spiral Coil Binding Supplies by Pitch helps narrow the compatibility side of the decision before moving on to diameter or finish. Compatibility should come before appearance here. That order prevents many of the mistakes that lead to wasted stock and time.

Silver works especially well when the document needs a clean, neutral, more polished look that can sit comfortably across many cover colors and office settings. Buyers often choose it for manuals, client-facing reports, training books, and presentation materials where a brighter or theme-driven color might feel too casual. A metallic neutral can make a book look more formal without pulling attention away from the cover or printed content. Silver is also useful when several departments or clients use different cover colors but still want one shared binding finish for consistency. Color choice here is less about function and more about presentation. Choose silver when the goal is a simple, professional look that stays flexible across many project types and does not force the document into a stronger design statement.

Buyers should think beyond the coil itself and plan for the full binding process. A complete setup often includes a compatible punch or binding machine, along with finishing tools that help keep the coil secure after insertion. Pairing the order with Spiral Coil Accessories also makes the finishing side easier to plan from the start. Covers and inside stock matter too because they shape the thickness and feel of the final piece. Good coil buying is really workflow buying. Order the items that support clean punching, smooth insertion, and secure finishing together, rather than treating the coil as the only piece that matters. A better-planned setup usually saves more time than trying to fill gaps after the first binding run.