By problem · requirement
What does it need to survive?
Start from the requirement, not the material. Each page grades the field problem on the Euphora durability scale, names the materials that pass, and spells out the trade-off — so you pick the cheapest material that actually survives, not the most expensive one that might.
Environment
Survives what the label is exposed to.Full immersion and long-term wet exposure without lifting or ink bleed.
See the grade & materials →Holds through freeze-thaw cycling where paper and standard adhesives delaminate.
See the grade & materials →Stays put and legible through heat — ovens, engines, industrial lines.
See the grade & materials →Resists fade and embrittlement under sustained direct sun.
See the grade & materials →Topcoat barrier against oils, solvents, and kitchen ghosting.
See the grade & materials →Surface & function
Behaves the way the application needs.Conforms to tight curves and compound shapes without flagging at the edges.
See the grade & materials →Lifts cleanly when the job is done — no adhesive ghost left behind.
See the grade & materials →Fragments or voids on removal so a broken seal is obvious.
See the grade & materials →Compliant adhesives and face stocks for food-contact applications.
See the grade & materials →Survives repeated hot-water wash cycles on glass, steel, and plastic.
See the grade & materials →