Promotional Printed Matches

You can personalize these custom printed matches with your company name and logo. These make a lasting impression on your customers.

Personalized Matches have the most cost-effective advertising medium ever invented! You will find no equal in low cost advertising as these book of matches.

There will be an additional $35 non-refundable artwork layout charge which must be paid before work can begin.

Stock Colors only are available on White Match Books: black, blue, green, red and purple.

Minimum order is one case, or 2500 books and are packed in cases of 2500 matchbooks.


Reverse Stock Colors on White Books of Matches
2500 Books 5000 Books 10,000 Books 25,000 Books 50,000 Books
1 Case
2 Cases
4 Cases
10 Cases
20 Cases
$104.00 per Case $99 Per Case $94 per Case $89 per Case $84 per Case
 
Reverse on White Match Books
 

 

Assorted Colors on Black (Reverse)
2500 Books 5000 Books 10,000 Books 25,000 Books 50,000 Books
1 Case
2 Cases
4 Cases
10 Cases
20 Cases
$104.00 per Case $99 Per Case $94 per Case $89 per Case $84 per Case
 
Black Reverse
 

 

Reverse Brown on Beige
2500 Books 5000 Books 10,000 Books 25,000 Books 50,000 Books
1 Case
2 Cases
4 Cases
10 Cases
20 Cases
$104.00 per Case $99 Per Case $94 per Case $89 per Case $84 per Case
 
Reverse Brown on Beige
 

 

Reverse Burgundy on Gray
2500 Books 5000 Books 10,000 Books 25,000 Books 50,000 Books
1 Case
2 Cases
4 Cases
10 Cases
20 Cases
$104.00 per Case $99 Per Case $94 per Case $89 per Case $84 per Case
 
Reverse Burgundy
 

 

Reverse Black, Red and Yellow
2500 Books 5000 Books 10,000 Books 25,000 Books 50,000 Books
1 Case
2 Cases
4 Cases
10 Cases
20 Cases
$104.00 per Case $99 Per Case $94 per Case $89 per Case $84 per Case
 
Black ReverseRed ReverseYellow Reverse
 

 

Black or Blue & Red on White
2500 Books 5000 Books 10,000 Books 25,000 Books 50,000 Books
1 Case
2 Cases
4 Cases
10 Cases
20 Cases
$124.00 per Case $119 Per Case $114 per Case $109 per Case $104 per Case
 
Black or Blue & Red on White
 

 

Please check out our other match products:

 

 

Heritage Advertising
4100 Bob Wallace Avenue SW
Huntsville, AL 35805
Telephone: (706) 374-0710
Email: email yard-signs.biz

Personalized Matches bring you American history lessons:

September 8, 1664

New Amsterdam becomes New York

Dutch Governor Peter Stuyvesant surrenders New Amsterdam, the capital of New Netherland, to an English naval squadron under Colonel Richard Nicolls. Stuyvesant had hoped to resist the English, but he was an unpopular ruler, and his Dutch subjects refused to rally around him. Following its capture, New Amsterdam's name was changed to New York, in honor of the Duke of York, who organized the mission.

The colony of New Netherland was established by the Dutch West India Company in 1624 and grew to encompass all of present-day New York City and parts of Long Island, Connecticut, and New Jersey. A successful Dutch settlement in the colony grew up on the southern tip of Manhattan Island and was christened New Amsterdam.

To legitimatize Dutch claims to New Amsterdam, Dutch governor Peter Minuit formally purchased Manhattan from the local tribe from which it derives it name in 1626. According to legend, the Manhattans--Indians of Algonquian linguistic stock--agreed to give up the island in exchange for trinkets valued at only $24. However, as they were ignorant of European customs of property and contracts, it was not long before the Manhattans came into armed conflict with the expanding Dutch settlement at New Amsterdam. Beginning in 1641, a protracted war was fought between the colonists and the Manhattans, which resulted in the death of more than 1,000 Indians and settlers.

In 1664, New Amsterdam passed to English control, and English and Dutch settlers lived together peacefully. In 1673, there was a short interruption of English rule when the Netherlands temporary regained the settlement. In 1674, New York was returned to the English, and in 1686 it became the first city in the colonies to receive a royal charter. After the American Revolution, it became the first capital of the United States.